Mims v. State

4 S.E.2d 831, 188 Ga. 702, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 624
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1939
DocketNo. 12962
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 4 S.E.2d 831 (Mims 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
Mims v. State, 4 S.E.2d 831, 188 Ga. 702, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 624 (Ga. 1939).

Opinion

Jenkins, Justice.

Will Mims was found guilty without a recommendation, of the murder of Dave E. Mitchell. The testimony for the State showed that the defendant and a woman with whom he had been living engaged in an argument in a city street; that the deceased said something as to the defendant cursing on the street; and after some altercation in which the hat of the defendant was [703]*703knocked off, the deceased went down the street, and the defendant followed him. The defendant was under the influence of liquor, and there was some evidence to indicate that the deceased was in a similar condition. After reaching a point down the street about a block distant, the deceased told a witness that a negro had hit him and knocked his hat off, and asked the witness where he could find or call the police. The witness advised him to go home; and the deceased turned back up the street until he reached a bridge, about three quarters of a block from where the trouble began. The route that he thus took was on the way to his home; and there was no evidence that he knew the defendant was following him, or that he knew he would meet the defendant again. The defendant and the deceased met at the bridge, where the defendant inflicted upon him a mortal wound with a knife. According to the evidence of another witness, the defendant “picked up the hat [of the deceased] and slung it, and went on down the street behind this white man, and at the bridge they tied up. [He] grabbed the white man. [The woman] went down there, and [the defendant] flung her loose from him. They tussled around about a minute or a half, and I heard him [the deceased] holler ‘Oh lordy’ twice. . . It looked like they grabbed each other, hugging, to me.” The deceased fell, stabbed in the neck, and soon died. Another witness testified on direct examination that the defendant had something shiny in his hand, a razor or pocket-knife, and threatened to cut the throat of the woman with whom he had been quarreling; that against her protest he went down the street in the direction in which the deceased was going, and “he caught up with the white man, and I saw him get in the road, and he was doing like that — hitting,— and after a while the white man turned and hollered. . . ' He was nearer the right side of [the] street where they were tussling, and when he said ‘Oh lordy’ he was going in that direction. I could see the white man’s hands going up like that.” There was no evidence as to any weapon being found on or near the deceased; and no evidence that he was armed. On cross-examination, the last-mentioned witness testified: “I don’t know how the fight started. . . They were tied up; just doing like that — -fighting. It started when [the defendant] went down there, and when he got down there he walked right side of the bridge, and they stepped back in the'road, and they went to throwing up their hands. He [704]*704stepped out of the road and stepped right back in the road. They were in the road tied up when I saw the white man the next time. They were fighting.”

In his statement to the jury, the defendant said that before the cutting he and the deceased were '•“fighting,” that he did not know who struck first, “but I know our hands went up together.”

The court did not abuse its discretion in refusing a continuance to the defendant on account of the absence of a subpoenaed witness, where at the hearing on the motion the defendant testified, “I don’t really need her as a witness,” and where it appeared only that the witness had left the county and gone somewhere in Atlanta, without any information as to where and when she could be found. See Power v. State, 8 Ga. App. 408 (2) (69 S. E. 315).

“When improper argument to the jury is made by an attorney for one of the parties, it is necessary, in order to make the same a basis for review, that opposing counsel should make objection to such argument or invoke some ruling or instruction with reference thereto by the court,” although “it is not essential that a motion for mistrial should be made.” Brooks v. Stale, 183 Ga. 466 (188 S. E. 711, 108 A. L. R. 752); Benton v. State, 185 Ga. 254, 257 (194 S. E. 166). Accordingly, it was not error to refuse a new trial on the ground that the solicitor-general improperly referred in his argument to an alleged confession made by the defendant in a hearing on his motion for continuance, but not introduced in evidence. For similiar reasons, it was not error to refuse a new trial because of questions by the solicitor-general, to which no objection was made, where in questioning two witnesses he referred to the defendant by the alleged prejudicial nicknames of “Whiskey” and “Rags.”

The court did not err, in the absence of a request, in failing to charge the jury on the law of confessions, where the alleged statement of the defendant as testified by the witness did not contain “every essential element necessary to make out the case” against the defendant, and therefore showed at most only an inculpatory admission rather than a confession (Allen v. State, 187 Ga. 178 (3), 181, 200 S. E. 109; Owens v. State, 120 Ga. 296, 48 S. E. 21; Clarke v. State, 165 Ga. 326, 140 S. E. 889; Powers v. State, 172 Ga. 1, 157 S. E. 195; Daniel v. State, 187 Ga. 411, 413, 1 S. E. 2d, 6); and where, even if the statement had amounted to a confession, there was sufficient independent evidence to sustain [705]*705the conviction. Allen v. State, supra; Sellers v. State, 99 Ga. 212 (25 S. E. 178); Gore v. State, 162 Ga. 267 (3), 273 (134 S. E. 36).

Under a proper interpretation of the Code, § 27-2301, that “on the trial of all criminal cases the jury shall he the judges of the law and the facts ” it is “the province of the court to construe the law applicable in the trial, . . and of the jury to apply the law so construed to the facts in evidence;” and “while the . . jurors are made absolutely and exclusively judges of the facts in the case, they are in this sense only judges of the law.” Berry v. State, 105 Ga. 683, 685 (31 S. E. 592); Johnson v. State, 118 Ga. 780 (45 S. E. 604). “The jury must accept as the law what the court charges them as being the law.” Rouse v. State, 136 Ga. 356 (6), 365 (71 S. E. 667). Therefore the following instruction was not subject to exception on the ground that it invaded the province of the jury as judges of the law and the facts: “The court is responsible to you, to the defendant, to the State, to society, to a proper administration of public justice, for a correct interpretation of the law of the case. You take the law of the case from the court, and applying that law to the facts, as you find the facts to be, you reach a conclusion speaking the truth of the ease molded into a verdict.”

Exception is taken to a refusal to give the following requested charge: “There may be a state of facts where the evidence, under the law, would demand a conviction of the crime of murder; but under our law, where the punishment to be inflicted for murder is left to the discretion of the jury, under no circumstances can this court say that the evidence demanded a general verdict of guilty which must be followed by the infliction of the death penalty.” •Whether or not the language as to what the "court” might "say”

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E.2d 831, 188 Ga. 702, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mims-v-state-ga-1939.