Lucas v. State

91 S.E. 72, 146 Ga. 315, 1916 Ga. LEXIS 728
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 19, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 91 S.E. 72 (Lucas 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
Lucas v. State, 91 S.E. 72, 146 Ga. 315, 1916 Ga. LEXIS 728 (Ga. 1916).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.

1-2. The rulings announced in headnotes one and two do not require elaboration.

8. When the girl left the accused on Saturday night at the drugstore, she -returned to the church and the accused went to the house of the deceased. When the girl returned home immediately after church service she discovered the body of her mother lying as indicated in the statement of facts. The deputy sheriff and the jailer of the county, about two o’clock Sunday night following, found and arrested the accused at the M. & A. junction on the Central Eailroad, a little more than four miles from the city. The deputy testified concerning the discovery of the accused, and his arrest and conversations with him, in effect as follows: Since the [318]*318discovery of the homicide there had been a general search for the accused; and learning that he was at the railroad junction, the officers went to that place. They found him in a little waiting-room, “lying down on a bench, side of the wall, on his elbow.” The deputy further testified: “I had a flashlight. I flashed my light. I had a gun in this hand, and when I flashed my light it looked like he was going to rise; and I says, ‘Lay still; I don’t want to hurt you;’ and Tom [the jailer] remarked ‘What in the world did you do this for ?’ and I says, ‘Take his pistol,’ and Tom says, ‘Give it to me,’ and I says, ‘No, you leave your hands right where they are.’ Tom caught hold of both his wrists, and I says, ‘Beach your hand in his pocket and give me his pistol.’ I told McCommons [the jailer] to hand me the pistol; and he asked us not to handcuff him, and I says, ‘It won’t hurt you to be handcuffed to go to jail.’ We were talking going along to the automobile, we were walking along, and I asked him, I says, ‘ Mr. Lucas, you were separated from your wife,’ and he says, ‘Yes,’ and I says, ‘What were you doing over there?’ and he sáys, ‘I went to take a letter that came to my house from some piano firm, and when I got there she asked me what I wanted,’ and he says, ‘I told her, “Here is a letter that came to my house, and I wish you would have your mail come to your house instead of mine,” and she says, “You need not have brought it; I don’t want you here anyway,”’ and finally I says, ‘When did you shoot her?’ and he says, ‘When she turned to go into the house.’ Mr. McCommons says, ‘You lived with your wife about a year before you married her, didn’t you?’ and he says, ‘Yes,’.and they said some few words, and they were talking, and in a few minutes, I says, ‘If you had separated from her, you had no right over there,’ and he says, ‘Well, if you loved a woman like I loved her, you would do almost anything,’ and he says, ‘I can not stand to see her going out automobiling with different men,’ and I says, ‘Were you drinking?’ and he says, ‘No,’ and I says, ‘You hadn’t had a drink,’ and he says, ‘No, I don’t drink,’ and he said since he had lost his job at the railroad he had not had right good sense, or hadn’t been in his right mind, and I asked him which way he went after he left the house, and where he went. He said some street. I know he said he went to the Georgia Southern Bailroad out towards Sofkee and Wellston. He said after he left the house he went to the Georgia Southern and stayed [319]*319there that night and next day and Sunday night. He came in town and weni to the M. So A. junction; and I asked him if he met anybody at Proctor So Gamble’s and talked to them; he said, no, he hadn’t seen a soul since he left the house until he was caught that night, and he said he hadn’t had a mouthful to eat or a drink of water since Saturday night. He said after the shot was fired he left the house. He said she had been arrested for selling whisky, which caused him to lose his position at the railroad, and he had been worried so he hadn’t been exactly right.” On cross-examination the witness testified: When arrested “Lucas was in a reclining position, lying down in the waiting-room; he had his eyes open. As far as I know, the first he knew of my presence was when I flashed the light on him and pointed the gun at him. I told him to lay still, I did not want to hurt him. The way that happened, he was lying down there, and I says, ‘I don’t want — ’ I might have said ‘kill you,’ or ‘I don’t want to hurt you, or you hurt me;’ I don’t remember the exact words; and after we got him handcuffed I says, ‘It won’t hurt you to handcuff you; it may save you from getting hurt, or some of us.’ To the best of my recollection, I told him that I did not want to hurt him. He got up from the reclining position while I had the shotgun pointed at him. He kept his hands in front, and I told McCommons to take the pistol. Mr. McCommons caught hold of his wrist, and the porter took the pistol from his pocket and gave it to me. He asked me not to handcuff him. I think Mr. McCommons said ‘What in the world did you want to do that for ?’ and I had the shotgun pointed at him at the time, and I put the gun on him at the same time I flashed the light. I didn’t keep the gun on him after he was handcuffed. I asked him as we were walking along, I says, ‘You are separated from your wife;’ it was at the same time we were going along to the automobile, and he told me that he had lost his position with the Macon, Dublin So Savannah Railroad on account of his wife being charged with selling whisky, and he said he loved her, and he said he went there to take a letter from a piano house about a piano, and he says when she turned to walk off to go in the house, I believe is what he said, he shot her. I have been there to the house twice. The front door is the only way intended to go in the house from the front.” By the court: “The gun was pointed at him before we put handcuffs on him. The conversation I had [320]*320with, him was after I handcuffed him. We were just walking along like two or three men would be to the automobile. We had not made any threats or held out any hope of reward to him to make the statements. After he was arrested and handcuffed we were all three talking; may be Mr. McCommons would ask him a question, and may be I would say something to him; we were just walking along talking. All that conversation I have testified to took place before we got into the áutomobile, and we talked some after we got into the car, and we talked some after we got to the jail; and I told him I was sorry for him, and I would do what I could for him. I don’t know whether defendant gave any answer to Mr. McCommons’ first question.” On redirect examination: “He started- to rise, and I says, ‘Lay still,’ I says, ‘I don’t want to hurt you, and I don’t want you to hurt me.’ I think that is what I said. When I flashed the light he started his hand to his right hip-pocket, and I says, ‘Don’t move your hand, lay still, I don’t want to have to hurt you.’ I got the pistol out of his right-hand hip-pocket. I made no statement to the defendant about the homicide while I had the gun pointed at him. I made no inquiry about it. As soon as Mr. McCommons handcuffed him I stopped pointing the gun at him. I was holding the flashlight and gun in the same hand. ’ From the time I got tlie pistol I did not say anything to him about the homicide. He made no statement as to how it happened, at that time. It was after we had a talk coming to the car that I told him that I was sorry for him and would do what I could for him. It was after he told me about shooting the deceased.”

The defendant objected to the admission of this testimony, on the ground that no foundation had been laid to admit an alleged confession, and that the statements of the defendant were made under fear and intimidation as well as by hope of reward.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.E. 72, 146 Ga. 315, 1916 Ga. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-state-ga-1916.