Moore v. State

52 S.E.2d 282, 205 Ga. 37, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 507
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1949
Docket16487.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 S.E.2d 282 (Moore 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
Moore v. State, 52 S.E.2d 282, 205 Ga. 37, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 507 (Ga. 1949).

Opinion

None of the grounds of the amended motion for a new trial show any cause for reversal; the evidence amply authorized the verdict, and the judgment overruling the motion for a new trial will not be disturbed.

No. 16487. FEBRUARY 15, 1949. REHEARING DENIED MARCH 16, 1949.
Junior Moore, alias Shine, was indicted, tried, and convicted, in Bibb Superior Court, of the murder of W. L. O'Cain, and sentenced to be electrocuted. The case comes here on exceptions *Page 38 to the overruling of the motion for a new trial as amended. Briefly stated, the record discloses substantially the following facts:

Roy Stanley, the negro who lived in the house by the side of which the deceased, W. L. O'Cain, was killed about 9 p. m. on the night of June 11, 1948, testified for the State: That he came home from work late that afternoon and then went to the grocery store. He returned to his house early that evening. Shortly thereafter the defendant came to his house and on in to the front room, and he saw him flirting with his wife, they were winking at each other. The witness testified that he got mad at this and ordered the defendant out of his house and pulled his wife back in the back room and scolded her. The defendant gave a different version of this occurrence in his statement, which is hereinafter quoted.

Louis Horne and his sister testified that the defendant came by their house with the rifle, and after some words about what he was doing with the rifle they sent and called the law, Louis Horne and his sister stating that the defendant had made the statement that he would kill them too.

Ben Ong testified for the State that he was a city policeman in the detective department, and was cruising in a radio car with the deceased, W. L. O'Cain, also a city policeman in the detective department, when they heard a call come in on the radio for another car, but decided that they would answer the call. This call was heard about 9 p. m. on June 11, 1948, and they started out in the direction of the Stanley house where this shooting later occurred, both of them being in plain clothes; and the witness stated that they immediately went on out to the scene in question, going first over to the house of Louis Horne, from whom the call had come, and then going around to a negro cafe several blocks away and then coming back again, with Louis Horne in the car, and parking on the left side of the street immediately in front of the house of Roy Stanley, which was No. 1638 First Street; that O'Cain was sitting on the front seat beside him; that he, the witness, was driving the car; that, after he parked the car he got out on the left side of the car and O'Cain got out on the right side of the car; that then he went to the right of the Stanley house, there *Page 39 being a number of houses in a row and being approximately 25 feet apart; and that O'Cain started around to the left side of the house of Roy Stanley (sometimes called Bud Stanley); and that there was a truck parked on the left side of the Stanley house in between that house and the next house to the left. The witness stated: "I told Mr. O'Cain that I would go to the right of the house and for him to go to the left of the house and we would meet in the back yard and try to catch the negro. That was the usual procedure we make when there are just two of us. I went between those two houses to the right and Mr. O'Cain was right there (indicating)." The witness had already testified that the call which they received was to investigate a negro with a shotgun. He then testified: "When we got out of the car, I started around the house between 1638 and the house that is nearer to town, 1634, and Mr. O'Cain went between these two houses, 1638 and 1640. I went between 1638 and 1634. 1634 is nearer to town than 1638. I went to the right of 1638. I was right here, and Mr. O'Cain was right there (indicating). Mr. Anderson asked me, `How far are these houses from the street, is any curb line there?' and I told him, `There is a ditch, no sidewalk.' I can give you the dimensions from the ditch to the steps of the house. It is approximately 18 feet from the street to the house. That is from the ditch back to the steps, not to the house. After I started around to the right of this house, Mr. O'Cain started to the left and I did see him before I heard the shot — I was in full view of him all the time. I never did get out of view of him. I was not looking at him all the time. There is a space across this porch, and I could see across the porch. It was bright. Mr. O'Cain never did get beyond the edge of the porch and out of my sight. I was not looking directly at him when the shots were fired. I know where I found him. I know exactly where he (Mr. O'Cain) was when the shots were fired. He had not entered between the houses. He was still between the two porches and was still talking to the negro preacher. He had not finished talking with the negro preacher and gone on when the shots were fired, he was still talking to him when the shots were fired. I know he was talking to the preacher because I could hear him talking and while he was talking I heard the shots, I am certain I heard Mr. *Page 40 O'Cain talking, because at the finish of his conversation he asked the preacher whether he had seen a negro pass through there with a gun. As to the lapse of time between that statement and when I heard the gun fire, it was immediately after O'Cain had asked the preacher if he had seen a negro pass with a gun. A person would not have had time to take two or three steps." He stated that Mr. O'Cain had a flashlight with him. This witness testified further that, after he heard the two shots and heard Mr. O'Cain call to him, he ran around to Mr. O'Cain and found him slumping to the ground, and then when he got help, taking him to the car and immediately to the hospital where he stayed with him until he died later that night. Other witnesses introduced by the State told of the other detectives and policemen who went out to hunt the person who had done the shooting, and of finding him about midnight in another house lying on a bed asleep, this other house being only two or three blocks away from the scene of the shooting. They took him into custody at once.

That portion of the statement of the defendant to the jury material to the questions here presented, which was substantially the same statement he had previously made to the officers, was as follows: "Well, the evening when all of this come up, that evening I was down town and I met Bud and I found him in a Broadway beer parlor. He was standing up there, and he asked me, would I buy a drink of liquor and he would pay me for it after he got home, and I said I would. We went in the Broadway liquor store and bought a pint of liquor and then went in the Broadway beer parlor and drank it, and he asked was I going on with him, and I said, `No,' I would be on home after a while, and I told him I would stop by when I went home. After I got to his house he first was not there, so I went on around home, and I come back down on Five Points corner and I was talking to some more boys and they were going up the hill on a truck, and I rode on up there with them and I got up to their house, I gets off the truck. There his door was open and there was no one in the front room, and Mary came to the door first and I stood there in the door with my hand on the door knob and I asked her where was Bud, and she said he was in the back, and I told Mary to tell him I wanted to see him and I *Page 41 asked him was he ready to let me have the money he was going to pay me down town for the liquor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 S.E.2d 282, 205 Ga. 37, 1949 Ga. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-state-ga-1949.