Ryder v. State

38 L.R.A. 721, 28 S.E. 246, 100 Ga. 528, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 12, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 38 L.R.A. 721 (Ryder 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
Ryder v. State, 38 L.R.A. 721, 28 S.E. 246, 100 Ga. 528, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 94 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Cobb, Justice.

W. L. Byder was indicted for the offense of murder. His •defense was that he did not commit the homicide charged in the indictment, and that if he did, he was insane at the time the killing was clone.

1, 2, 3. When the case of the accused was called for •trial, he made a motion for a continuance on account of the .absence of four witnesses. His motion complied strictly with the law regulating such matters. Penal Code, §962. And the only matters about which there could be any question were whether the facts sought to be proven by the absent witnesses were material to the defense, and whether or ■not he could prove the same facts as well by other witnesses. It was claimed ‘that the accused was subject to fits of insanity produced by a chronic disease of the ear which orignated -at an early period of his life, and that when suffering from the effects of this disease, he was and had been at various times in his life insane and irresponsible. Two of the absent witnesses were his brothers, who, according to the showing made, had associated with him more intimately than Ms ■other relatives, and Ms physical and mental condition was more peculiarly within their knowledge than that of any •other members of Ms family. Another witness was one who had been acquainted with Mm from Ms childhood, and who knew of Ms infirmity and of Ms periods of alleged insanity .and irresponsibility. The remaining witness was a physician who had known the ‘accused all Ms life, and was professionally familiar with the nature of the alleged disease. It further appeared in the showing for a continuance that all these witnesses would swear ‘to the insanity of the accused at times when Ms disease was at its worst. In the showing the facts upon which their testimony would be based appeared in detail. The counter-showing disclosed that there were other ‘relatives, members of the immediate family of the accused, who were present at the trial, and could be ■called as witnesses, but it did not appear that any of these [532]*532would testify -to the peculiar facts set out in the motion for • a continuance and upon which it was based. It is proper, however, to add that the four absent witnesses did not see • the accused on the day of the homicide, or at any time imme- • diately preceding that day. In a case like the present, where there has been a shocking homicide, and where there • can be scarcely a doubt that the accused committed it, although he does not expressly so admit in his plea, the defense mainly relied on being that of insanity at the -time of' the killing, it was depriving the accused of a very great right when he was forced to trial in the -absence of these-four witnesses who knew the facts that were material to his defense, and whose presence was important to the proper determination of the issue-. It is especially so in the jmesent case when the record shows that there was much evidence-■for the State to show that the accused w-as sane. The large--amount of evidence for the State showing the sanity of the accused, instead -of being a reason for overruling’ the motion for a new trial, is a stronger reason for granting one. The • refusal of the court to continue his case deprived the accused of ¡the benefit of the four witnesses, who, above all' others, were needed by him in his trial to meet the mass of' evidence showing sanity. The court should • have -either ■ continued the case for the term, or postponed the trial until' a later day in order that the accused might have secured the - attendance of these witnesses, in order that the jury might pass upon the question of their credibility and the weight to be attached to their testimony.

4. The physician, who was the absent witness in -the mo- • •tion above referred to, subsequently appeared at t-he trial, but was compelled -to- leave the court f-or providential cause.Before leaving he requested counsel for the accused to al- • low him to go upon -the stand and testify, so as not to he required to return to- the court, to which request they declined to accede. "We do not think that the accused lost-any of his rights to complain of the subsequent absence of [533]*533■this witness because his counsel failed to interrupt and .«change the line of his defense and the manner in which it was being conducted so as to place this witness upon the ■.stand in advance of the time when they had contemplated .--so doing. It is an important right of the accused to be allowed to introduce his witnesses in the order in which he or his counsel think is to the best interest of his case, and witnesses should not be allowed to dictate to counsel as to when they should be put upon the stand. The failure of counsel to introduce the witness at a time which was inconsistent with the interest of the accused should not generally deprive him of his right to complain of the absence of a witness at a -subsequent stage of the case, if that absence is in no way occasioned by the accused or his counsel.

5. Following the decision of this court in 'the case of Carr v. The State, 96 Ga. 285, and the cases there cited, the propositions stated in the 5th head-note are too well settled to need further discussion.

6. Where the defense of insanity is relied on, and there is evidence of expert and non-expert witnesses who testify .as to the sanity of the accused and who were “parties who ..associated with the defendant, lived with him, lived in the .-.same community,” it was error for the judge to charge the jury that the testimony of expert witnesses was entitled to great weight, and to add, in substance, that the testimony of intimate associates of the accused should be given similar weight. All this testimony is allowed for the purpose of informing the jury as to the truth of the issue, and the weight to be given to it is for them. The judge should not .intimate in any way to them how they should deal with any particular class of witnesses, but under proper instructions lc-ave the entire matter to them. It may be that in certain ■cases the testimony of non-expert witnesses would, in the mind of an intelligent juror, outweigh the testimony of the alleged expert witnesses, and that in other cases the testimony of the expert would be given the greater weight; but [534]*534the jury are the sole judges,of such things, and the judge-should leave them untrammeled to pass upon the credibility of all -witnesses, and give such weight to the testimony of each as they see proper.

7. “Where the question under examination, and to be decided by 'the jury, is one of opinion, any witness may swear-to his opinion or belief, giving bis reasons therefor.” Penal Code, §1021. There seems to have been no violation of this-well settled rule in regard to the non-expert witnesses in this-case. Each witness examined was allowed to state his opinion, and no- one did so without giving his reasons therefor. The opinion and the reasons go to the jury together, that the-jury may determine what the opinion is worth. It may be-that a particular reason given for an opinion is not really a good one, and such a reason would most probably in the-mind of an intelligent juror destroy the opinion at once; but, nevertheless, the opinion and the reason ought to be-considered, that the jury may give the opinion such weight ■as they think proper.

8. When a jury is about to be impaneled for the -trial of a felony case and -the panel is “put upon the accused,” and the names of the individual jurors are being called, it is com- - petent for the State, or the accused, to make certain objections to each juror as he is called. Penal Code, §973.

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Bluebook (online)
38 L.R.A. 721, 28 S.E. 246, 100 Ga. 528, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryder-v-state-ga-1897.