Hudson v. State

113 S.E. 519, 153 Ga. 695, 1922 Ga. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 19, 1922
DocketNo. 2997
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 113 S.E. 519 (Hudson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudson v. State, 113 S.E. 519, 153 Ga. 695, 1922 Ga. LEXIS 152 (Ga. 1922).

Opinion

Fisi-i, C. J.

Glen M. Hudson and Bennie Hudson were jointly charged, in an indictment found in the superior court of Dougherty county, with the murder of Bobert Temples and Isaiah Temples on July 12, 1921, by unlawfully and maliciously beating and wounding them with sticks and clubs and by shooting them with a pistol. Glen M. Hudson was tried separately, and found guilty as charged. He moved for a new trial, which being refused, he excepted.

The defendants were husband and wife. The deceased were respectively about nine and four years of age. They were illegitimate children of Bennie Hudson, born before she married Glen M. Hudson. He was not the father of either of them. At the time the children were killed they were living with the defendants on a farm about three miles from the city of Albanj', this State. Each child was killed by a pistol shot in his head on July 12, 1921. The [697]*697evidence for the State tended to show that they were killed in the morning shortly before sunrise, and that soon thereafter the defendants left the house wherein they lived, closed, except one rear door, and together drove in a wagon to Albany. Some time about eight o’clock in the morning the children were found dead, the older boy’s body in a small porch in the rear of the dwelling, and the younger one inside the house.' The State submitted evidence as to many circumstances tending to connect both the defendants with the killing of the children. Glen M. Hudson will be hereinafter referred to as the defendant.

1. Error is assigned, in the motion for a new trial, on the admission of the testimony of one Shep Bruno, a witness for the State, over the objections of the defendant. This testimony was to the effect that the witness heard Mrs.-Hudson say to the defendant that it seemed strange, and she could not understand why the witness, a negro, could get a job, and the defendant a white man, could not; that the defendant replied that the reason was that Bruno had been working out there four or five years, and they knew him, but that they did not know the defendant; that Mrs. Hudson then said, One or the other of them [she or the defendant] had to go to w;ork and get a job somewhere, because her children had to have bread and meat, and some shoes and clothes to wmar, and he said he didn’t have a house full of children to work himself to death for;” that on the same day the witness heard Mrs. Hudson ask a man who came by her house if he could let her have some meal, and, upon an affirmative answer, she requested the defendant to go to the man’s house and get it; and that defendant went and brought back a quart and a half of meal. The objections urged against the admission of all this testimony were that it was irrelevant, and constituted a privileged communication between husband and wife. The conversations occurred on the day before the children were killed, and were admissible as circumstances tending to show the lack of interest the defendant had in the children, and the needy circumstances of the family.- On the trial of a husband charged with a crime a conversation between him and his wife, when relevant, may be testified to by one who overheard it. Knight v. State, 114 Ga. 48 (39 S. E. 928, 88 Am. St. R. 17); Ford v. State, 124 Ga. 793 (53 S. E. 335); Nunn v. State, 143 Ga. 451 (85 S. E. 346).

[698]*6982. The sixth ground of the motion consists of more than seven pages of typewritten matter. It relates to the testimony of the deputy sheriff, a State’s witness. More than fifty questions asked on direct, cross, redirect, and recross examinations, and the answers thereto, are set forth in detail; much of the testimony was competent and admissible, and much of it immaterial. The testimony was objected in bulk, no specific objection being made to any particular portion of it. As often ruled by this court, such objection presents no question for decision.

3. In the seventh ground of the motion error is assigned upon the admission of the testimony of Denson, the deputy sheriff, á witness for the State, to the effect that he asked the defendant, while in jail, “why he didn’t tell us that Mrs. Hudson said that she had killed the children, and he didn’t make any answer,” and further that the sheriff asked the defendant while in jail, “ didn’t he tell him in Macon [while in jail there] that Mrs. Hudson said she had killed the children, after they had got about half way to town, and if he didn’t say that she seemed to be very nervous; and he said she did.” The witness testified that these statements were made by defendant when he was in the “ condemned cell ” of the jail and in the hall where the “condemned cell” was; that defendant’s wife was present; that the statements were freely and voluntarily made by the defendant; and that no threats were made nor any hope held out to him by any one to induce him to make them. It appears from the witness’s testimony that a dictograph had been placed in the cell wherein the defendant was confined, that, he knew it was there and did not say anything except to tell his wife to “ hush.” The objection to the testimony was that it appeared from the evidence that the dictograph was put in the cell the day the defendant was brought back from Macon, and “ that all the circumstances showed that he was being handled and his person put in different places-, and settings were made, and a woman brought up there that day, and the conditions and circumstances were such that he would not exercise his free will; that anything said under those circumstances was not freely and voluntarily made.” The court did not err in admitting the testimony as to the statements of the defendant, which were prima facie freely and voluntarily made without the slightest hope of benefit or the remotest fear of injury; it being for the jury to finally [699]*699determine, under' proper instructions, whether the statements were so made. The fact that the statements may have been induced by a mere trick, artifice, or deception would not render them inadmissible. Cornwwall v. State, 91 Ga. 277 (4) (18 S. E. 154).

4. In the eighth ground of the motion it appears that sheriff Tarver, a witness for the State, testified that he had a conversation with the defendant in jail at Macon, that the defendant there made a statement freely and voluntarily, that he did not threaten him nor offer him any reward.” “ I told him his wife accused him.” Mr. Payton, defendant’s counsel, interrupting the witness, said, I object to conversations with his wife, any conversations between sheriff Tarver and defendant’s wife; and I further object to testimony along this line, because the evidence shows he had transferred him from this county to Bibb, and there must have been some reason why he should not have remained in this county; and the fact that he was transferred from this county to Bibb county, and the fact that he was in the presence of the sheriff, brought about a set of circumstances that necessarily created in the mind of the defendant a condition of terror and fright, and any statement he might have made under such circumstances would not be free and voluntary; and we object to it for that reason.” Solicitor-general: “ I am not asking the witness anything that Mrs. Hudson said. It is immaterial whether Mrs. Hudson said it or not. My friend, Mr. Payton, is assuming that’Mrs. Hudson said it. He says he told the defendant that his wife said he killed the children.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.E. 519, 153 Ga. 695, 1922 Ga. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-v-state-ga-1922.