McVeigh v. State

53 S.E.2d 462, 205 Ga. 326, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 357
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 12, 1949
Docket16612.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 53 S.E.2d 462 (McVeigh 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
McVeigh v. State, 53 S.E.2d 462, 205 Ga. 326, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 357 (Ga. 1949).

Opinion

1. The confession of the accused being corroborated by sufficient independent proof to establish the corpus delicti, the evidence warranted the verdict; and the trial court did not err in overruling the general grounds of the motion for new trial.

2. A duly certified public record is admissible in evidence without proof of its authenticity by the person who prepared the record.

3. No error was committed in allowing a State's witness to testify from his own knowledge that dental records similar to a record introduced in evidence were used in the Army to identify deceased soldiers.

4. It is not error to fail to charge the law of alibi, where no written request for such a charge is made, and this defense, if raised, is raised solely by the defendant's statement.

5. The charge of the court on the contentions of the State was not subject to the criticism that it amounted to an expression of opinion and was not supported by the evidence.

6. On a charge of murder, proof that the crime was committed prior to the return of the indictment is sufficient.

No. 16612. May 12, 1949. *Page 327
Johnny McVeigh was indicted for the murder of John Frank Stringfellow, the indictment charging that the defendant "in the County of Ben Hill and State of Georgia, on the 21st day of September, 1944, with force and arms, did with malice aforethought kill and murder John Frank Stringfellow by administering, and causing to be administered to the said John Frank Stringfellow, narcotic drugs in such amount and portion to be a deadly poison, from which said narcotic drugs and poison the said John Frank Stringfellow did then and there die, which said drugs were administered for the purpose of killing with malice aforethought the said John Frank Stringfellow."

On the trial, the jury returned a verdict of guilty with a recommendation of mercy. A motion for new trial was filed by the defendant; and this motion, as amended, was overruled. To this judgment the defendant excepted.

The State's case rested upon the following evidence: W. H. Stringfellow testified that he was the brother of John Frank Stringfellow, and the last time he saw his brother alive was on September 12, 1944, at the home of the witness in Phenix City, Alabama, when his brother left in the company of one Dave Walden; that a suitcase exhibited to him was one belonging to his brother, which he had at the time he left the witness's home; that previously, in the office of the Sheriff of Muscogee County, he had examined a skull and some bones, as well as a shoe, and he had identified the skull as being the remains of his brother; that he identified the skull by one filling in an upper tooth on the back side of the skull, this being a tooth the witness had seen filled by a dentist; that he also identified the shoe as being one belonging to his brother; that at the time his brother left the witness's home, he was in the United States Army, was in good health, and was not addicted to any kind of narcotics or drugs; that the witness saw Dave Walden give his brother a shot of narcotics on the day his brother left the witness's home. The witness further testified: "I am positive that the skeleton that I examined at Columbus with Sheriff Howell, and the shoe I examined there, is the skeleton and the shoe of my deceased brother, *Page 328 John Frank Stringfellow." A skull was exhibited to the witness and he testified that it was the same skull formerly shown him, and that the tooth he identified was still in the skull.

Bernard Charles Hammon testified: that he was a dental surgeon in the Army with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, stationed at Fort McPherson; that he had been in the Army since 1935; that he was familiar with dental charts used in the Army, and that a photostatic copy of a dental chart exhibited to him was a copy of a dental chart made by dental officers of the Army; that the chart shown him was one made for "Stringfellow, John F., serial number 34836063," and that the chart was one used for a patient, showing a diagnosis and the various treatments, and on the chart there were various symbols showing extractions and cavities in the mouth; that he had never seen nor treated John Frank Stringfellow; that he was stationed in Fresco, California, in 1944, when the dental chart was made, and that he did not know a Major Paul T. Scollard, whose signature appeared on the chart, dated June 21, 1944, and that the witness did not see the chart made; that he first saw photostatic copies of the chart in the office of the G. B. I. in Atlanta, and at that time he examined the chart and a skull. The witness was handed a skull, and then testified: "That is the skull of John Frank Stringfellow. Comparing this skull with the records of the photostat I conclude that this is the skull of John F. Stringfellow, whose serial number is 34836063."

Donald Wetlofer testified that he was Captain and acting Judge Advocate in the United States Army at Fort McPherson; that a "dog tag" exhibited to him was that of John F. Stringfellow, serial number 34836063; that a dental chart exhibited to him was one used in the medical department of the Army, and that this particular chart was made at Camp Croft, South Carolina, shows the soldier's name and serial number, rank and company, his age, race, and native State; that such records are permanent records, kept by the Army at the Records Depot at St. Louis; that the records are kept under guard by the Army, and only those people authorized may have access to them; that this particular record was obtained by the witness and turned over to an officer of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation for the purpose of making photostatic copies of the record, and the officer in turn *Page 329 had given the witness the original record on the day of the trial; that the original record was sent to him through the mail in response to a telegram; that photostatic copies handed to him were correct copies of the original record.

W. F. Stringfellow, recalled, identified the "dog tag" as being one that his brother, John Frank Stringfellow, gave him at the witness's house.

T. M. Price, employed by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, testified that a suitcase exhibited to him (and previously identified as belonging to John Frank Stringfellow) was one which he had found in a bedroom occupied by Dave Walden at Cherokee Inn located on U.S. Route 16 in Liberty County.

Albert William Armentrout Jr. testified that his sister married the defendant, and that she lived at 411 E. Magnolia Street in Fitzgerald, Georgia, a portion of the year 1944, but the witness would not say that the defendant ever lived there; that this house is located in Ben Hill County, Georgia; that the defendant and his wife worked at a shipyard in Brunswick in 1944, and would drive back to their home, but the witness did not remember ever having seen the defendant at this house in Fitzgerald except on one occasion in 1944.

E. F. Howell, Sheriff of Muscogee County, Georgia, testified that he made an investigation into the death of John Frank Stringfellow; that he went to where the body was buried; that the grave and skeleton were between Jacksonville and St. Augustine, Florida. The witness identified the skeleton, which he stated he helped get out of the grave, and also a picture made at the scene of the grave.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.E.2d 462, 205 Ga. 326, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcveigh-v-state-ga-1949.