McDaniel v. State

74 Ga. App. 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 13, 1946
Docket31254
StatusPublished

This text of 74 Ga. App. 5 (McDaniel v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDaniel v. State, 74 Ga. App. 5 (Ga. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Gardner, J.

Since the case is reversed on a special assignment of error on the ground of newly discovered evidence, we will not comment on the general grounds.

Special ground 1 of the motion is based on the affidavits of Tobe Adams and Fletcher Lawrence, the owner of the Morning Star which was the subject-matter of the arson. It will be noticed that Fletcher Lawrence testified at the trial of Ealph McDaniel and Doc Hammond. These affidavits are accompanied by the supporting affidavits required for the consideration of an assignment of [11]*11error based on newly discovered evidence. We will set forth the affidavits of Adams and Lawrence in full, omitting the formal parts. Tobe Adams’ affidavit reads as follows: “Deponent is a resident of the County of Covington, State of Alabama, and the city of Opp, in said county, and has been all of his life. During the month of February, 1945, and some time previous thereto deponent was engaged in the taxi business, that transporting persons for hire by automobile. Deponent has known Fletcher Lawrence, who was reared at Opp, Alabama, all of his life. About February 14th, 1945, deponent had a trip to Eufaula, Alabama, to take a couple of passengers, and knowing that the said Fletcher Lawrence had a place of business at Georgetown, Georgia, across the river from Eufaula, Alabama, after he delivered his passengers at Eufaula he drove across the river to see his friend Lawrence. Deponent had on previous occasions, when on trips to Eufaula, gone over to the said Lawrence’s place of business to see him; this place of business being known as the Morning Star, and wine and beer were sold there.

“On the occasion last referred to, to wit, Feb. 14th, 1945, when he arrived at the said Morning Star, which was about 10 o’clock in the evening, he asked for Fletcher Lawrence, and was told by the man in charge, whom deponent did not know, but whom he heard others on that occasion call by the name of Joe, that Lawrence was no longer there, and that he, Joe, had the place and was operating it. Deponent drank a bottle of beer or so, and stayed around the place for perhaps an hour talking to the man called Joe. The man Joe asked deponent if he would haul a load of stuff for him across the- river to Eufaula; deponent asked him ‘What sort of stuff ?’ and was told by Joe that it was beer, that he had more than he wanted to keep at the place, and wished to take some of it to his home in Eufaula. Joe offered deponent $10 to do the hauling, and deponent agreed to do so. Joe loaded the truck and the back of the deponent’s car with beer, the amount of which deponent does not know, but would judge it was about thirty-five cases of beer, and got in the car with deponent and they drove to Eufaula, to a house pointed out by Joe, where Joe unloaded the beer. On the way to Eufaula, Joe talked to deponent about buying a shotgun which Joe had put in the automobile when they left the Morning Star, saying he was taking the gun home. Deponent likes to hunt, and needed [12]*12a gun, and asked Joe what he wanted for the gun. Joe told him he would give him the gun in paying for hauling the load of beer, and deponent accepted it, and took the gun home with him at Opp, Ala.

'“Deponent read something in the newspapers about the trial of Hammond and McDaniel at Quitman, Georgia, charging them with burning the Morning Star, and a few weeks thereafter, he met Fletcher Lawrence at Opp, Alabama, and got to talking with him about the burning, and in the course of the conversation told Lawrence about his having visited the Morning Star, about Joe telling him that he then owned the place, about hauling the beer for Joe, and about Joe paying him with the shotgun. Lawrence asked to see the gun, deponent took Lawrence to his home, and showed the shotgun to him which Joe gave him, and Lawrence identified the gun as being his property, and being the gun which he had left in the Morning Star on the day before the burning of the Morning Star; whereupon deponent turned the gun over to the said Fletcher Lawrence.

“Deponent did not know, and still does not know, either of the defendants, Ealph McDaniel and Yernon Hammond. He had never seen the man named Joe, herein referred to, before the transaction herein related, and has not seen him since, but could identify him should he see him again. Deponent has no interest whatever in the ease of the State of Georgia v. Ealph McDaniel and Yernon Hammond. Should the said defendants be granted a new trial deponent would and will attend their trial in the Superior Court of Quitman County, Georgia, and testify to what is herein related.

‘•“Deponent had not told any person of the transaction herein related with the man called Joe at the place of business of Fletcher Lawrence, called the Morning Star, at Georgetown, Ga., until he told Fletcher Lawrence of it some several weeks after the trial of the said Ealph McDaniel and Yernon Hammond. Deponent makes this affidavit with the knowledge that it will be used in support of the motion for new trial of the said Ealph McDaniel and Yernon Hammond. [Signed] Tobe Adams.”

Fletcher Lawrence’s affidavit is as follows: “Deponent is a resident of Quitman County, Georgia. Prior to February 14th, 1945, deponent was operating at Georgetown, Georgia, a place of business known as the Morning Star, at which wine and beer was sold, and [13]*13which was burned on the night of Feb. 14, 1945. Deponent was born and reared at Opp, Ala., and his mother still lives at Opp. On the morning of Feb. 14th deponent left Georgetown to go to Opp to visit his mother, and left one Joe Pippin in charge of the place of business called the Morning Star. Deponent had another place near Eufaula, Alabama, and Pippin, who lived in Eufaula, just across the river from Georgetown, worked for deponent where he was needed. Deponent was notified that his business had burned the next morning after the fire, and returned to Georgetown that same day. He questioned Joe Pippin about the fire, and Joe told him that he did not know who burned it.

“Ealph McDaniel and Vernon Hammond were indicted and tried at the September term, 1945, of Quitman Superior Court for the offense of burning the said Morning Star. Deponent went to Opp, Alabama, a few weeks after this trial, and happened to see Tobe Williams, who said he read in the newspapers about the trial of McDaniel and Hammond for burning deponent’s place of business, and told deponent that he had been in Eufaula in February, had gone to the Morning Star to see deponent, was told by the man in charge that deponent no longer owned that business, but that he, Joe, was in charge; that this man Joe asked him, Adams, to take some beer to Eufaula to Joe’s home, which he did, and that Joe paid him for the hauling with a shotgun. Deponent asked to see the gun, Adams took deponent to his home and showed him the gun. The gun thus shown to deponent by Adams was the shotgun which deponent left at the Morning Star on Feb. 14th, when deponent had left Joe Pippin in charge of the place, and which Joe Pippin testified on the trial of McDaniel and Hammond was in the place when it burned. Upon identifying the gun as his property, Tobe Adams turned it over to deponent, and deponent now has it.

“Deponent did not know any of the facts herein related until after Ealph McDaniel and Vernon Hammond were tried and convicted. Upon learning the said facts herein related, deponent immediately communicated them to Ealph McDaniel and Vernop. Hammond, and to their attorney, A. H. Gray, this occurring during the month of October, 1945, in the latter part of the month.

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

Related

Landers v. State
24 S.E.2d 139 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1943)
Brand v. City of Lawrenceville
13 S.E.2d 214 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1941)
The People v. Cleaver
5 N.E.2d 463 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1936)
Mitchell v. State
65 S.E. 326 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1909)
Nolan v. State
82 S.E. 377 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1914)
Paden v. State
86 S.E. 287 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1915)
Todd v. Jackson
101 S.E. 192 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1919)
Clackum v. Bagwell
151 S.E. 689 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1930)
Harper v. State
177 S.E. 886 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1934)
Jackson v. State
192 S.E. 454 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1937)
Southern Grocery Stores Inc. v. Kelley
194 S.E. 234 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 Ga. App. 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-v-state-gactapp-1946.