Jolley v. State

153 S.E. 31, 170 Ga. 461, 1930 Ga. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 18, 1930
DocketNo. 7559
StatusPublished

This text of 153 S.E. 31 (Jolley 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
Jolley v. State, 153 S.E. 31, 170 Ga. 461, 1930 Ga. LEXIS 165 (Ga. 1930).

Opinion

Beck, P. J.

Lucius Jolley, the plaintiff in error, was indicted for the offense of murder, it being charged in the indictment against him that he did unlawfully, feloniously, and with malice aforethought, with a knife, the same being a weapon likely to produce death, cut and stab Angeline Jolley, thereby inflicting upon her a mortal wound from which she then and there died. Upon the trial the defendant filed a plea of not guilty. After the submission of evidence, the defendant’s statement, and the charge of the court, the jury returned a verdict of guilty, without a recommendation. [462]*462The defendant was sentenced to be electrocuted. A motion for a new trial was overruled, and the defendant excepted.

Angeline Jolley, the decedent, was the wife of the defendant. They had been married two or three years, but were living in a state of separation. After they had separated the decedent sent to her former home to get her trunk containing her personal effects. They had been partially destroyed by fire. She swore out a warrant against the defendant for malicious mischief. On an occasion before the date of the homicide, the defendant had gone to see his wife at the house of her mother, and carried a shotgun with him on one occasion, but left it at a store across the street, and then tried to persuade her to withdraw the warrant against him. On the day of the homicide the wife, in company with another woman, met the defendant, and he asked her whether she intended to withdraw the warrant which she had sworn out against him. She would not consent to do so, and he cut and stabbed her with a knife, which, according to a witness for the State, he had concealed or partially concealed in his sleeve. An eye-witness to the homicide testified that she had gone with the deceased to a white person's home and got two bundles of clothes; the witness had one and the decedent had another; and then testified: “When we got to the bridge going back home, the defendant stopped, and he says, ‘Angeline, are you going to do what I asked you to do,’ and she says, ‘You ask me to do so much; what did you ask me to do ?' and he says, ‘You know,' and she says ‘No, I don't know,' and he says, ‘Are you going to take the warrant up ?' and she says, ‘No,’ and he asked her that several times, and she says no every time. He was standing in front of her holding her at the time right here by her coat. And I says, ‘Honey, my time is getting short, come on,' and she started walking off, and he says, ‘Are you going to take that warrant up ?' and she says, ‘No,’ and he stabbed her right here in the breast, and I ran between them, and he stabbed her twice. T did not see him pull the knife out. When he turned her loose she fell on the bridge after he got through. He was holding her while he was stabbing her. I then went to the end of the bridge and hollered. I grabbed his coat and hollered murder, and hollered catch him, and nobody didn’t pay me any mind. He stabbed at me; when I tried to catch hold of him he drew back and stabbed at me. I was there when the sheriff came, and Angeline was still lying there.” The witness testified that the defendant ran.

[463]*463An embalmer’s assistant, who had handled the body of Angeline Jolley, testified that there were three wounds upon the body of the dead woman; that “she had one- wound under the right breast, another on the left side, and one right in the back, between the shoulders and the back. The wounds were about an inch wide and between five and a half and six inches deep, all three of them.” They probed the wounds.

The deputy sheriff testified that he “caught the defendant the next morning between six and seven o’clock. He was in the loft of a dwelling-house, 150 or 200 yards from his mother’s house. He did not have a knife. Asked him about the knife, he said he threw it away.”

The defendant made a statement as follows: “Gentlemen of the jury, we met, and this girl, both of them. We were coming back, we had been after some clothes, and we were talking. I really loved the girl. I didn’t mean to do what I did to her. I was out of my head. I didn’t know what I was doing. I wouldn’t done it for nothing in the world. I ask you all to have mercy on me. That is all I have to say.” The deputy sheriff, recalled, testified that he arrested the defendant and “asked him why he wanted to kill his wife. He said she had sworn out a warrant for him, and he was trying to get her to take it up, and she got mad and commenced cursing him and wouldn’t hush, and he stuck his'knife in her.”

The motion for a new trial in tlie case contains the grounds that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, contrary to law, and without evidence to support it. In an amendment to the motion are several special assignments of error. The first of these is based upon exception to the following portion of the court’s charge: “The defendant has made a statement; it is not made under oath. The jurj should consider the statement and give it such weight as they think it entitled to have; they may believe the statement in preference to the sworn evidence in the case, if they think proper to do so, where the statement is contrary to the evidence.” Movant insists that this charge is error, “because under the law the jury is entitled to believe the statement of the defendant in preference to the sworn testimony of the State. And the fact that the court charged he jury that they may believe the defendant’s statement in preference to the sworn testimony of the State where it is [464]*464contradictory to the State’s evidence or testimony is reversible error.” The wording of this charge is not entirely accurate. It might be construed to mean that the jury might believe the statement in preference to the sworn evidence in the case, if they should think proper to do so, where the statement is contrary to the evidence, but otherwise it should not be accepted by them. But this would be evidently a very strained construction; for the court had just instructed the jury that they should “consider the statement and give it such weight as they thought it was entitled to have.” The jurjr, after considering the entire instruction upon the subject of the statement, could hardly have concluded otherwise than that' the instructions upon the subject of the statement meant that they should give it such weight as they thought it entitled to have, and that they might even believe the statement in preference to the sworn testimony in the case if they thought proper to do so, even though the statement was contrary to the evidence. Thus construed — -and this is the palpable meaning of the court’s instructions, — it was not erroneous. In Harrison v. State, 83 Ga. 129 (9 S. E. 542), error was assigned upon the following portion of the court’s charge: "What the law means by believing it [the defendant’s statement] in preference to the sworn testimony is, when the sworn testimony and the statement conflict in material matters.” And in the opinion in that case it was said: “This charge is attacked as instructing the jury that the prisoner’s statement could not avail him unless in conflict with the sworn testimony, and as denying him the benefit of his statement if sustained or corroborated by the witnesses. No fair construction of the charge could extract from it this meaning. The statute says that the jury may believe the statement in preference to the sworn testimony; and the court explained the import of the statute, and did not undertake to limit the jury, in their consideration of the statement, to those matters touching which it might be in conflict with the evidence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Harrison v. State
9 S.E. 542 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 S.E. 31, 170 Ga. 461, 1930 Ga. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jolley-v-state-ga-1930.