Ross v. State

124 S.E.2d 280, 217 Ga. 569, 1962 Ga. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 8, 1962
Docket21439
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 124 S.E.2d 280 (Ross 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
Ross v. State, 124 S.E.2d 280, 217 Ga. 569, 1962 Ga. LEXIS 329 (Ga. 1962).

Opinions

Grice, Justice.

The substantial question here, upon review, is whether the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict finding the defendant guilty of murder with a recommendation.

On September 21, 1943, the defendant, Clyde Frederick Ross, was indicted by the grand juiy of Dougherty County for the murder of Leopold Crine on April 9, 1943. A special plea of insanity at the time of the trial, as provided by Code § 27-1502, resulted in a verdict of insanity by a jury on October 2, 1943, and judgment was entered committing the defendant to Milledgeville State Hospital. He remained there until February 6, 1961, when he was returned to Dougherty County for trial. Upon his trial in April, 1961, the defendant made no issue as to having killed the deceased but defended upon the ground [570]*570that he .was insane when the homicide was committed. The jury found him guilty with a recommendation and the court sentenced him toi life imprisonment. His assignment of error here is on the denial of his motion for new trial on the general grounds only.

1. A preliminary question relates to the state of the record as to restoration of the defendant’s sanity from the 1943 verdict of the jury finding him insane at the time of the trial and the subsequent judgment committing him to the Milledgeville State Hospital. This record does not affirmatively reveal any restoration to sanity by any of the procedures provided by law, though restoration is suggested by certain testimony and documents that do appear. We have given this phase of the case careful consideration!, including direction to the clerk of the trial court to send up any additional evidence bearing upon such question and invitation to counsel for briefs.

This question was not raised at the 1961 trial and is disavowed by defendant’s counsel upon this review. It was mot incorporated in the motion for new trial, the grounds of which related only to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict of guilty for the crime committed in 1943. In any event, coxnpliance with Code § 27-1504 that “No lunatic or person afflicted with insanity shall be tried, or put upon his trial, for any offense, during the tixne he is afflicted with such lunacy or insanity . . .” is a matter of pretrial for the presiding judge. In this connection, the bill of exceptions, approved as true and correct by the trial judge, recites that on February 6, 1961, the defendant “was released back to the Dougherty Counity authorities for trial, pursuant to law.”

The entire record not negativing such coxnpliance, the presumption is that the public officer’s of this State, including the Superintendent of the Milledgeville State Hospital and the trial judge, performed the duties incumbent upon them by law, and that the defendant was restored to sanity after being “discharged in the manner prescribed by law” (Code § 27-1502; Richardson v. Hall, 199 Ga. 602, 604, 34 SE2d 888), befox’e he was put on trial and tried in 1961 for this offense. See White v. Grimes, 216 Ga. 335 (116 SE2d 561); 22A C.J.S. 352, Criminal Law, § 589 (1).

[571]*571Therefore, the introduction into evidence upon this 1961 trial of the 1943 verdict of insanity and judgment of commitment of this defendant did not of itself invalidate the verdict of guilty subsequently rendered. The 1943 verdict and judgment became a part of the entire evidence adduced at the 1961 trial, the facts upon which they were based to be rebutted or not rebutted by consideration of all the other evidence in the case. Thus, the only question remaining for our consideration is whether the evidence authorized the verdict finding the defendant guilty of murder with a recommendation.

2. The picture, as drawn by the evidence, has for its background hospital records from Hackley Hospital in Muskegon, Michigan. Those records showed that in 1941 the defendant suffered a brain infection, followed by epileptic seizures, as the result of tongs applied to his head during treatment of a broken neck. There was indication of a distinct personality change after this illness.

The events leading up to the homicide under inquiry here began, according to the defendant’s written statement, when he stole a pistol from the Michigan State Troops, of which he was a member, and then bought a regular army cap and a set of master sergeant stripes to use with his Troops uniform so that it appeared to be an army uniform. Tire defendant thought he would be able to get rides easier if he were dressed like a regular soldier. He left Michigan on March 29, 1943, hitch-hiked to Chicago and from there to San Antonio, Texas. If he could not get a ride at night he would go to the USO and spend the night. He stated that he carried the gun in his suitcase most of the time he was on the road. On April- 7th he left San Antonio, on his way to Jacksonville, Florida. About 75 miles east of Pensacola, Mr. Crine gave him a ride. When they were some 12 miles from Albany, Georgia, Mr. Crine’s home, the defendant took out his gun and forced Crine to stop the car, get out, and walk some distance out into a wooded area. There, the defendant had the victim give him his wallet. Finding no money in it the defendant handed it back and “when I gave his wallet back to him he stepped forward away from me. When he started to step away from me the gun fired and I realized I had shot him. I do not know how many times I shot him. . .”

[572]*572The defendant related that he then got in the deceased’s car and drove about two miles to a gasoline service station where he bought gasoline. Not having rationing coupons he told the attendant he lived nearby and would bring them to her later. He then drove on through Albany and a few miles north of that city discovered that he was not on the road to Jacksonville so turned around, intending, he said, “to go back out to where I had shot and left [the deceased] and get the gasoline rationing tickets out of his bill folder and come back by the place where I had bought the gas . . . and give her the tickets that I owed her, and also to have more gasoline to get to Jacksonville with.”

After he had turned around and headed back toward Albany, “running about 70,” the defendant met a State Highway Patrol car. The patrolmen turned around and stopped him. They, not satisfied with the defendant’s explanation as to why he, with a Michigan! driver’s license, was driving an automobile with a Georgia license plate, took him into Albany for further questioning. There, a short time later, he confessed to killing Leopold Crine, the owner of the car, led police to the body, and made a written statement giving the details related here, and others.

Upon the trial the State’s evidence consisted of the above referred to written statement of the defendant, given shortly after the homicide, and the testimony of five witnesses, viz., the attendant from the service station where the defendant bought gasoline shortly after the murder, one of the State patrolmen who stopped the defendant and brought him into Albany, a county policeman who took and prepared the defendant’s written statement, and was in the group the defendant led to> the body of the deceased, the 1943 Albany Chief of Police to whom the defendant confessed, and the solicitor general who also served in that capacity in 1943.

Relying primarily on the presumption of sanity, the State offered no expert testimony on that issue.

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Ross v. State
124 S.E.2d 280 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.E.2d 280, 217 Ga. 569, 1962 Ga. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-state-ga-1962.