Millen v. State

165 S.E. 226, 175 Ga. 283, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 10, 1932
DocketNo. 8707
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 165 S.E. 226 (Millen 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
Millen v. State, 165 S.E. 226, 175 Ga. 283, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 236 (Ga. 1932).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

Dan.Millen, A. J. Jester, and S. G. (referred to in the record as Tom) Day were jointly indicted for the murder of B. W. Bennie. Millen was tried separately and was found guilty, with a recommendation by the jury to mercy, and the court sentenced him to life imprisonment. His motion for a new trial was overruled, and he excepted.

It appears from the evidence that the deceased Bennie, the defendant Millen, and the witness Jester lived in a two-room house, Millen and Jester occupying one room together and Bennie staying in the other room alone. According to the testimony of Jester, on Saturday preceding the Sunday on which the homicide occurred Millen said to him: “ Let’s knock Bennie out and take his money.” Witness told him no, he could not do that, and did not want to have anything to do with it. On the following day, Sunday, after these three had eaten dinner Millen went off, returning about four-thirty or five o’clock in the afternoon. Day came back with him. “When they came back Tom Day walked in there in my room. I do not know where Millen was then; he was outside somewhere, and Tom walked in there. Tom Day then went in Benny’s -room over in the [285]*285same building. After Tom Day went in Benny’s room I walked out on .the back porch down next to Benny’s room. From where I was on the porch I could see in Benny’s room. I did not go in Benny’s room later. I could see Benny and Tom Day in Benny’s room. . . While I was on the back porch Tom Day walked in and spoke to him. . . Millen was then on the front side, and then he walked in there. . . He came in the porch that I was on. . . Millen then went in Benny’s room. I was then still on the porch. After Millen went in Benny’s room I could still see in Benny’s room. Tom Day and Millen and Benny were in there. Millen had an ax in his hand. That was what I would call a club-ax. It had a handle in it. . . Benny was close to the right side. After Benny got in the room nothing was said to Benny by anybody. I did not hear anybody say anything. I could have heard it if any one had said anything. Dan Millen then knocked Benny off the box. . . Benny was sitting with his face to the fire. Then when this man [defendant] walked in with the arm to his side; lie came in back of Benny like he was going by him. With Benny’s face to the fire, if he kept his face to the fire he could not have seen Millen or what Millen was doing. I-said he was making like he was going by him, and he turned around and struck him. Millen struck Benny side of the face with an ax, with this same ax. I was on the porch seeing all this. He had the ax in both hands, and struck him side of the head this way [indicating]. He hit him with the back of the ax, the eye of the ax. Benny fell oyer off the box. Benny did not say anything. Millen and Day did not say anything. After he fell off on the floor Dan Millen took his money out of his pocket, and he hit him two or three licks after he fell on the floor. Those other licks were hit after he fell on the floor. He hit somewhere about the head, with the same ax. What happened after he got through hitting him with the ax was, Millen ran his hand in his pocket, in his right-hand side pocket, in Benny’s pocket. He took money out of his pocket.”

The material part of the testimony of the witness Beese Hill, as to the statements made to him by Dan Millen, was as follows: "I was confined in jail here at Darien last fall. While I was in jail here at Darien these boys in this case, Dan Millen, Tom Day, and A. J. Jester, were put in jail. . . I heard these three men talking among themselyes about this thing and Benny being killed. [286]*286Millen said Jester killed the man and tried to put it on him, and Jester said that Millen killed him and said to Millen, ‘Yon killed him and you know you did/ and Dan said, ‘No, I didn’t/ Tom Day didn’t have anything to say at that time. They had this argument in jail. Sometime after this argument I had a talk with Millen; it was in the presence of Jester; they wasn’t out of hearing, but Jester was sleeping right by me, a snoring. It was at night. I don’t know whether Day heard it or not; he was downstairs in the jail with Millen. I suppose they heard what Millen said. He was clown there with him; I was upstairs, and he was downstairs. I was right above them, close to them, on the next floor. As to whether Day was in the same cell Millen was in, he was on the same floor with him; they were on the bottom floor. I don’t know whether they were in the same cell or not. That was one night when J ester was snoring. Millen called to me and said that he fixed a way to get some monejg and Jester got caught up with and then turned "them up. He said that he and Day made it up together and came back to the shanty where they was, and Jester and Benny was there, and that Day went in the room and got to talking to him, and that he went in the room where Day was talking to him, and that he came along and hit him with an ax. That was Dan Millen doing that talking. Millen said that he (Millen) hit him with the ax and Jester wanted to run away, but that Day grabbed him and wouldn’t let him run.”

After a careful and painstaking examination of the testimony, it is very evident that the verdict of guilty was supported by sufficient evidence, if the testimony in behalf of the State was credible in the opinion of the jury. The witness A. J. Jester, in his story, discloses a sordid picture of the defendant murdering the deceased with a club-ax, by blows inflicted before the deceased had an opportunity to defend himself, merely to get the few dollars of wages supposed to be in the pocket of the deceased, and when the deceased was not aware that the defendant was approaching him. There are some of the statements of Jester which do not conform with the blood-stains and blood which were found near a cot, while he says that Dan Millen, the defendant, struck the blows which killed Bennie in front of the fireplace several feet away from where the blood was found. And it appears from other evidence that there was no blood-stain or bloody track such as might have been ex[287]*287pected if the body had been dragged as testified by the State’s witness. Nevertheless we can not say that the jury was not authorized to believe the witness. The testimony of Jester was corroborated by that of Reese Hill, who testified that he was placed in jail at the time Dan Millen and A. J. Jester were confined there, and that one-night when Jester was snoring loudly the defendant Dan Millen admitted that he made up his mind to get some money by “knocking out” R. W. Bennie, the deceased, who was supposed to have saved a portion of his wages as a turpentine hand. While the circumstances of the alleged ofíense might to some minds have rendered it quite improbable, still the jury were authorized to believe it. There is nothing to show that the statement of the defendant in confessing his guilt was not voluntary and freely made. No question was raised as to the admissibility of the evidence of confession, but the complaint is made that the court erred in failing to instruct the jury as to the rule which should govern the jury in their consideration of evidence as to a confession.

There are several special grounds in the motion for a new trial. In the first ground it is alleged that the charge of the court, to wit, “To this indictment the defendant, Dan Millen, has entered his plea of not guilty; the State says he is guilty; and that makes the issue which you are to try,” was error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 S.E. 226, 175 Ga. 283, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millen-v-state-ga-1932.