Nobles v. State

38 L.R.A. 577, 98 Ga. 73
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 38 L.R.A. 577 (Nobles 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
Nobles v. State, 38 L.R.A. 577, 98 Ga. 73 (Ga. 1896).

Opinion

Atkinson, Justice.

1. The plaintiff in error, having been convicted of the offense of murder, made a motion for a new trial upon extraordinary grounds, which the circuit judge entertained, and upon which he granted a rule nisi requiring the solicitor-general, who prosecutes for the State, to show cause why a new trial should not be granted. At the hearing a motion was made to dismiss the motion for a new trial, upon the ground that the reasons urged to sustain it were insufficient in law to authorize the court to assume jurisdiction and entertain it. This motion was overruled, and the motion for a new trial, being considered upon its merits, was itself overruled. In this court counsel for the State sought to raise again the question of the insufficiency of the grounds stated to authorize the circuit judge to entertain and determine the motion for new trial, suggesting that inasmuch as the court had no jurisdiction to entertain the motion, no error thereafter committed in overruling it could be considered upon writ of error. "We do not think this contention well founded. It will be borne in mind that the present is a criminal case, and that a ruling made by a circuit judge adverse to the State, even if otherwise subject to meritorious objection, cannot be reviewed upon writ of error; and this is true even if exceptions pendente lite to the ruling complained of had been taken by counsel for the State, which was not done in the present case, and could not [77]*77be done in any criminal case. The State, not being entitled to prosecute directly a writ of error for the reversal of such a^uling, is not entitled by indirection to call again in question a ruling thus made against the defendant in the court below. We therefore dismiss the technical question made in this case, with the observation that inasmuch as the circuit judge entertained the motion and determined the questions made upon their merits, this court will not inquire whether the grounds upon which he entertained the motion made upon alleged extraordinary grounds were or were not sufficient in law, but will treat the motion as in all respects regular, and review upon their merits the several rulings alleged as error in the grounds of the motion.

2. We do not think the court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion to set aside the judgment upon either of the grounds of the motion made for that purpose. The plaintiff in error, jointly with four others, was charged in one count of the indictment as a principal in the first degree, and in the second count was charged as a principal in the second degree. The jury found against her a general verdict of guilty, and the effect of this verdict was to convict her as a principal, whether in the first or second degree is immaterial. The offense of murder in both degrees is punishable alike in this State. See Leonard v. The State, 77 Ga. 764; Collins v. The State, 88 Ga. 347, and authorities there cited. They involve the rendition of the same judgment, are carried into execution in the same manner; and hence, whatever difference of opinion may have heretofore existed as to whether the evidence necessary to support a conviction under an indictment charging one as principal in the first degree will support a conviction of one as principal in the second degree, such differences are now definitely resolved by the judgment of this court rendered in the case last above cited, wherein the present Chief Justice, then Associate Justice Simmons, in delivering the opinion of the court, pronounces as follows: “There is no difference in [78]*78this State between the punishment of a principal in the first degree and that of a principal in the second degree, and where this is true, it seems now to be well settled that there is no practical or material difference between principals of the two degrees, and a principal in the second degree may be convicted on an indictment charging him as a principal in the first degree; in other words, an indictment charging one as principal in the first degree is supported by evidence showing him to be a principal in the second degree.” Such being the law of this State, it is unnecessary and unprofitable to inquire upon which count of the indictment the sentence is to be pronounced; it is the same in either; the grade of the offense is the same, and if the conviction under the evidence can be upheld on either, there is no reason why the verdict is not a legal one. Indeed, that precise question was ruled by this court in the case of the State v. Dohme, 68 Ga. 339. So, too; it can make no difference that some of the jointly indicted defendants were acquitted and some convicted. Under the provisions of our Penal Code, §969, this may occur without affecting' the legal status of those convicted. See Rachels v. The State, 51 Ga. 374. While the indictment in the present case alleges a conspiracy between the defendants in the execution of a common purpose to murder the deceased, it is not an indictment for the technical offense of conspiracy, which involved at common law proof not only of tire illegal act, but the unity of purpose between the conspirators. In that case the conspiracy was of the gist of the offense, the illegal act only an incident which served to characterize the conspiracy. Hence, it was held that if the proof of the conspiracy failed as laid, the accused must be acquitted. The provision of our code above referred to eliminates however that difficulty, even if in cases like the present the doctrine could ever have had application. It will be observed that the distinction between the present and cases like those above referred to lies in the fact that in such cases the conspiracy [79]*79was made by statute the central incriminating fact, the ultimate result — the homicide — the incident; while in the present case the homicide constituted the breach of the public law, and the conspiracy was only incidentally the means by which the violation of the law was accomplished. It could have been as well accomplished by the .commission of the homicide by one person alone, .as by that person acting in conjunction with many; and hence the proof of the conspiracy, the conspiracy itself not being á substantive part of the offense, was not necessary to a conviction of those persons who were shown to have participated in both the criminal design and the criminal act. Thus we are led to conclude that the court committed no error in overruling the motion which was made to set aside the judgment.

3. The plaintiff in error, having been jointly indicted, elected to be tried jointly with several others. It occurred that upon the trial the State’s counsel saw proper to introduce confessions separately made by each of the several defendants, and it was objected that the court in its charge so confused the instructions to the jury as to malte the confessions made by each of the several defendants bear against the other, thus practically admitting as evidence against each other the sayings of the alleged conspirators made after the termination of the joint enterprise. We do not think that this criticism of the charge of the court is borne out by the record.

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Bluebook (online)
38 L.R.A. 577, 98 Ga. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nobles-v-state-ga-1896.