Pride v. State

66 S.E. 259, 133 Ga. 438, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 17, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 259 (Pride 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
Pride v. State, 66 S.E. 259, 133 Ga. 438, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 238 (Ga. 1909).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.

1. The defendant was convicted of murder, and made a motion for a new trial, which being overruled she excepted. Ella Pride was the defendant. Will Smith was the deceased. Minnie Smith was the wife of Will Smith, and a witness for the State. Among other things she testified, in substance, as follows: Will Smith and Charles and Jerry Pride, the latter two being respectively the husband and stepson of the accused, were all picking cotton in the same field, the two Pride men being closer to Will Smith than witness, and all three of the men being close to the road. At the scene of the homicide some of the ground was smooth and some of it was not. The place where deceased fell “was kind of slanting like, not much though; I can’t tell exactly how much; the rows ran around the slant.” Witness was about 25 yards from Will Smith when she heard a conversation between him and Ella Pride with reference to a hat, and the conversation was immediately followed by the Teport of a pistol, which proved to be the fatal shot. The cotton was higher than witness and thick, and she could not see them exactly. There was also a little cotton-house between witness and the place where Smith was shot, but she could see around the house from the place where she was standing at the [440]*440time of the shooting. She saw Ella Pride and the smoke from the pistol, but did not see Will Smith or either of the Pride men. Will Smith was taller than Ella Pride. Witness did not know whether Will Smith was stooping down or standing up at the time of the shooting, but said that if he had been standing up looking as she was she could have seen him. One of the grounds of the motion for new trial complained of the refusal of the court to exclude the testimony of this witness, “from where I was standing I could have seen Will Smith if he had been standing up,” upon the objection urged that it was a mere conclusion of the witness. In 1 Greenleaf on Evidence (16th ed.), §441 (b), pp. 549-50, it is said that the opinion rule is “based on the thought that where the data for drawing an inference are before the jury, or can be placed before them, it is superfluous to add by way of testimony the inference which they can equally well draw for themselves.” TJnder such circumstances it is further said “that the witness’s influence is superfluous and unnecessarjr, and should, therefore, not be brought into the case. . . The witness’s opinion is excluded, not because inferences as such are objectionable (for a witness’s knowledge and all knowldege is made- up of inferences), but because the inference, under the circumstances, is superfluous; and because if one person could be summoned and inquired of in this way, then the opinions of a score could equally be asked and all of them superfluous and calculated to encumber the trial without adding anything to the essential data already before the jury.” But after stating the rule and the reasons therefor above given, the text, continuing, recognizes as an exception thereto that the opinion of a layman or common observer may be received in evidence if such person “observed the matter in issue and can not adequately state or recite the data so fully and accurately as to put the jury completely in the witness’s place and enable them to equally well draw the inference.” The meaning of the text is that under the circumstances . enumerated in the exception the inference is not superfluous, but is of some assistance to the jury. That is really made the test. If the circumstances are such as to render the inference superfluous, it is excluded; if not, it is admitted. The exception alluded to is practically recognized in Mayor etc. v. Wood, 114 Ga. 370 (40 S. E. 239), where it is said: “The opinion of a witness is not admissible in evidence when all the facts and circumstances are [441]*441capable of being clearly detailed and described so that the jurors may be able readily to form correct conclusions therefrom.” It will be observed that the application of the general rule made in the case cited was predicated .on the non-existence of circumstances sufficient to bring the case under the exception. To the same effect are rulings in the cases of Southern Mutual Insurance Co. v. Hudson, 115 Ga. 638 (43 S. E. 60); Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Goodwin, 130 Ga. 83 (47 S. E. 641); Thomas v. State, 133 Ga. 151 (50 S. E. 64); O'Neill Manufacturing Co. v. Harris, 137 Ga. 643 (56 S. E. 739); Moore v. Dozier, 138 Ga. 95 (57 S. E. 110); Robinson v. State, 138 Ga. 355 (57 S. E. 315). The testimony objected to in the case before us involves the expression of a negative inference by a common observer, based on an observation which she testified that she made. If the witness spoke truthfully, it did not require an extended operation of the reasoning faculty to enable her to draw the inference involved in the testimony objected to. If she had the opportunity of seeing Will Smith and did not see him, though she were looking where she could have seen him if he had been standing up, the inference that he was not so standing was one that any ordinary person would naturally draw. There are many instances where negative inferences have been received in evidence under such circumstances, some decisions holding that the inference was a mere statement of fact, and others that if it involved the expression of an opinion the circumstances were such as to bring the case within the exception rather than under the general rule. The case of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe R. Co. v. Miller, 39 Kan. (Randolph) 419 (18 Pac. 486), was an action for damages on account of negligence in killing certain cattle. Two witnesses testified that the whistle was not sounded, and they were satisfied that it was not; that they were in a position to have heard it if it had been sounded. In discussing the admission of this testimony, the court expressed the opinion that the testimony was “more in the statements of the facts than in the opinions of the witnesses, . . but they are such observations as are made by men of ordinary intelligence without any special knowledge, learning, or skill; but even if it was the opinion of the witness and not a fact about which' he was testifying, still we think it was such an opinion as falls within the exception to the general rule. The very nature of the circumstances about [442]*442which they were testifying, with the surroundings, conditions of the atmosphere, wind, organs of hearing, obstructions, and a host of other incidents, could not be portrayed to a jury in such a manner as to enable them to draw a conclusion from the facts.” It is quite probable that under the general current of decisions from other States the inference involved in the testimony objected to in the case at bar, relating, as it did, merely to the probability, under the circumstances narrated, of the witness seeing Will Smith if he had been in a standing position, was a mere statement of a fact, and was in no sense the expression of an opinion. But we hold that whatever element of opinion there may be involved in the testimony, it falls within the exception to the general rule, and was not objectionable on the ground taken. In Welch v. Stipe, 95 Ga. 762-4 (22 S. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 259, 133 Ga. 438, 1909 Ga. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pride-v-state-ga-1909.