Jones v. State

69 S.E. 527, 135 Ga. 357, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 529
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 527 (Jones 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
Jones v. State, 69 S.E. 527, 135 Ga. 357, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 529 (Ga. 1910).

Opinion

Beck, J.

Thomas H. Jones was tried on an indictment charging him with murder. The person alleged to have been feloniously» killed was Wiley Bishop. The evidence introduced on the trial was voluminous and conflicting. Eye-witnesses testified to the shooting of Bishop by the accused under circumstances which made the killing murder; other witnesses testified to facts that might have been considered as justifying or mitigating the offense; and still others testified that the accused did not fire the fatal shot, but that it was fired by John Jones. There were two counts in the indictment; one charging that the accused killed the deceased by shooting him with a pistol, and the other charging that he inflicted the wounds which resulted in death by striking the deceased on or about the [359]*359head with the butt of his pistol; and there was evidence introduced to show the character of the wounds inflicted on the head of the deceased, and tending to show that these were fatal wounds. The jury found the defendant guilty; whereupon he made a motion for a new trial, which upon the hearing was overruled, and the defendant excepted.

■ 1. After the verdict in this case was made, but before it was published, counsel for defendant made a motion for a mistrial, based upon certáin alleged irregularities and improper conduct on the part of certain jurors; which motion, after hearing evidence, the court overruled; and it is recited in the bill of exceptions that the plaintiff in error Assigns error upon this ruling of the court. No pendente-lite exceptions were filed, and the direct bill of exceptions in the case sued out to the judgment of the court overruling the motion for 'a new trial was not tendered within twenty days after the ruling complained of. Hence the assignment of error just referred to can not be considered by this court.

2. While the exception to the ruling of the judge in refusing a mistrial was taken too late, considered as a direct exception to that ruling, the question as to whether the judge properly overruled the motion is raised in one of the grounds of the motion for a new trial; and it is to be considered there in the light of the showing made by the plaintiff in error and the counter-showing made by the State.

When the jurors, after having been charged with the consideration of the case, returned to the court-room and announced that they had made a verdict, counsel for the accused, before the rendition of the verdict, made a motion for a mistrial, stating to the court as a ground therefor that, he had received information to the effect that certain jurors had stated^to the officers of the court in charge of the jury that they had practically decided upon the verdict in the case the night before and that they stood eleven- to one, and that this was prior to the charge of the court and before the argument of counsel had been concluded; and on the further ground that certain jurors had asked the bailiff in attendance upon the jury as to what was the bailiff’s opinion about the case. In support of the motion counsel had one of the bailiffs in charge of the jury sworn before the court; and this bailiff, in response to questions directed to him, stated that two or three members of the jury questioned him [360]*360about the case and inquired of him what he thought of it; to which - he replied that he had no right to talk about the case. The bailiff under examination also stated that on the morning of the day when the verdict was rendered and before argument of counsel was concluded one of the jurors said to him, “We came very near settling this last night; we talked it over;” and said, “All agreed except about one, and I don’t think we will have any trouble in making a verdict.” The bailiff further testified that no one was present but himself and the juror when that statement was made. The juror referred to in the foregoing testimony of the bailiff was one Biley. The bailiff further testified that the same juror referred to and another member of the jury spoke to him again in- reference to the case, “and wanted to know what I thought about it, and I says, I can not tell you nothing, and he'insisted upon it, and I says, ¿all that I will say to you that I have always said I don’t think Mr. .Jones had anything to do with the shooting.’ I expressed myself that far. . . I didn’t express it as my opinion. I said that I always said I didn’t think he was guilty.” Further testifying the bailiff stated that Mr. Stalely (Stable), a member of the jury, spoke to him and said they came very near settling the case last night,, but he could not swear positively whether Mr. Stable spoke to him after his talk with Mr. Biley or not, and that the only juror to whom he “really talked” was Mr. Biley, and the only thing said to him was that he (the-bailiff) “always thought Jones had nothing to do with it — didn’t fire the shot.” It was made to appear from the testimony of the bailiff that the jury were kept together at night in sleeping-apartments which consisted of seven rooms, with connecting doors leading from one to the other, and that the bailiffs were in charge of the end rooms and that no one could or did approach the jury except the bailiffs. The same bailijf further testified, in effect, that several.of the jurors were persistent in discussing the case; and gave as an instance, that the night -before, at the dining-table in the hotel where the jurors took their meals, several of them repeated the remarks to which the bailiff had referred in the preceding statement. What was said by the jurors was said out of the hearing,of every one except themselves and the bailiff. No one else was near enough to hear the remarks. As a counter-showing the solicitor-general submitted affidavits of the members of the jury, contradicting the bailiff’s testimony. The juror Biley, referred to in the [361]*361testimony of Thaxton, the bailiff, made an affidavit deposing that “he absolutely denies the correctness and truthfulness of the statements of the said Thaxton in his testimony set forth, and says that the following is everything that occurred with reference to said case during the trial thereof between the said Thaxton and this deponent and the other members of said jury or any of them, so far as this deponent knows, is informed, or believes, to wit: After the court had adjourned for the day on the second day of the trial of said case and the jury had been carried for the night to the hotel, and while deponent, George S. Bolton, George W. Barnes, and J. B. Baggarly were seated in one of the rooms that had been provided for the jury, conversing and laughing and talking with one another, the said Thaxton walked into the room and in substance said: ‘Well, boys, I believe I can always tell how the verdict of a jury is going to be,’ and deponent simply replied, ‘Well, how do you think this verdict will be?’ to which the said Thaxton answered: ‘All I have got to say is, that Tom Jones never shot Bishop.’ Immediately after this remark the conversation between deponent and -the other members of the jury was resumed, and nothing other or further passed then or at any other time during said trial between the said „ Thaxton and deponent or any other member of the jury in deponent’s presence; deponent paid no attention whatever to the remark of the said Thaxton at the time it was made, and would not have recalled it except for the testimony of the said Thaxton in the motion for a mistrial just before the verdict was received.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 527, 135 Ga. 357, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-state-ga-1910.