Seymour v. State

81 S.E.2d 808, 210 Ga. 571, 1954 Ga. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 10, 1954
Docket18564
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 S.E.2d 808 (Seymour 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
Seymour v. State, 81 S.E.2d 808, 210 Ga. 571, 1954 Ga. LEXIS 374 (Ga. 1954).

Opinion

Candler, Justice.

Sylvester Seymour was indicted in Richmond County for the murder of Thomas Broome on December 23, 1952. He was twice convicted of the offense charged against him and on each conviction was sentenced to be electrocuted. Before his first trial and before pleading to the merits, he filed special pleas attacking the validity of the indictment, and prayed that it be quashed and that he be acquitted of the offense for which he was indicted and be released and discharged from custody. As grounds for his special pleas, he alleged that he had been illegally arrested for the homicide of Thomas Broome, and thereafter illegally held in jail for four or five days before a warrant was issued for his arrest; and that, in consequence of such illegal arrest and such illegal detention, the indictment subsequently returned against him was null and void, resulting, as he alleged, from a denial of enumerated constitutional rights guaranteed to him both by the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of Georgia, including the due-process clause of each. His special pleas were overruled and dismissed, and he complained of that judgment in a motion for new trial which he later filed. On a review of that trial, we held that he could not, in a motion for new trial, properly assign error on the judgment overruling and dismissing his special pleas. Seymour v. State, 210 Ga. 21 (77 S. E. 2d 519). But on that review of his case we granted him a new trial because of the improper admission of certain testimony. Subsequently, and before his second trial, he again filed a special plea to the legal sufficiency of the indictment and again prayed that *572 it be quashed, alleging as grounds therefor the same facts which he had set up in his first special pleas. A plea of res judicata, which the State filed thereto, was sustained by the judge and the special plea was also dismissed on oral motion. That judgment was excepted to pendente lite and error is assigned on it in the bill of exceptions. Error is also assigned on a judgment denying a motion for new trial, which the accused filed after his second conviction and which was based on the usual general grounds and six special grounds. Held:

1. There is no merit in the contention that the court erred in sustaining the State’s plea of res judicata and in dismissing on oral motion the defendant’s special plea. -To the present special plea, the State pleaded in bar thereof a former judgment in the case, which fully adjudicated the issue now made; and the judgment so pleaded by the State has been neither reversed nor modified by any exception which the accused has taken to it, and such unreversed and unmodified judgment has consequently become and is the law of the case. Code §§ 38-623, 110-501; Matthews v. State, 125 Ga. 248 (54 S. E. 192); Northern Assurance Co., Ltd. v. Almand, 210 Ga. 243 (78 S. E. 2d 788), and citations.

2. The first special ground of the motion for new trial alleges that, when E. Y. Allgood, a State witness, was testifying, or about to testifjq as to an incriminating admission made to him by the accused concerning the alleged murder, counsel three times asked for a preliminary hearing to determine the competency of the evidence being or to be introduced, and it is alleged that the judge erred in failing to grant “immediately” the request for such hearing; and, after the same was granted, in failing to retire the jury from the courtroom while the hearing was being conducted. Incorporated in and made a part of this ground, is a lengthy account, as testified to by the witness Allgood, of the investigation which he and three other officers made concerning the killing of Thomas Broome; the arrest of the accused without a warrant on the day after the homicide; and an incriminating admission which the accused made to the witness Allgood soon after he was taken into custody. In view of the fact that the judge granted and there was had a full preliminary hearing, which shows the free and voluntary character of the incriminating admission which the accused made to the witness Allgood, we are unwilling to hold that a new trial should be granted because the court failed, as alleged, to grant the request for such a hearing “immediately.”

(a) “When, after a proper preliminary examination as to their free and voluntary nature, confessions or criminating admissions are adjudged competent and received in evidence, there is no room for any question touching the propriety of having conducted the preliminary examination in the presence of the jury.” Fletcher v. State, 90 Ga. 468 (17 S. E. 100).

3. The second special ground complains of the court’s refusal to permit counsel for the accused to make a full and complete preliminary examination as to the prima facie admissibility of a written confession, which the State claims the accused freely and voluntarily made on December 29, 1952. This ground contains a full report of the examination which was made with reference to the written confession and, *573 from an examination of the same, wo have reached the conclusion and hold that the accused was not denied any right with reference thereto; but on the contrary, the record shows that a full and complete preliminary examination concerning the admissibility of the written confession was in fact made. Hence this special ground of the motion is not meritorious. And a different ruling is not required because the judge, while the State was introducing evidence to show that the written confession was in fact freely and voluntarily made, refused to allow the accused to call a named investigating officer for the purpose of rebutting the evidence which the State had offered as to the free and voluntary character of the written confession; and this is especially true since the record shows that the investigating officer, whom the accused desired to call, later testified as a witness for the State and the accused was then afforded full opportunity to question him about the character of the written confession.

4. On the trial under review, the court admitted in evidence, over objection by the accused, a written confession of guilt which the State contends he freely and voluntarily made after his arrest. The allowance of this evidence was not erroneous. With reference to the confessions, oral and written, the record is in all material respects substantially the same as it was when the case was formerly here for review, except there is evidence of an additional oral confession which the State contends the accused freely and voluntarily made and which was also allowed in evidence without objection. Here, as on the first trial, there was-no objection to the admission of the oral confessions; and, consequently, no exception was taken to their allowance as evidence. This being true, the ruling which we made on our first review of the case with reference to the admissibility of the same written confession is now controlling. Accordingly, special ground three of the motion is without merit. See Seymour v. State, supra, and citations.

5. The fourth special ground complains of an interruption which the court allegedly made while counsel for the accused was cross-questioning a witness for the State. This ground of the motion shows no error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 S.E.2d 808, 210 Ga. 571, 1954 Ga. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seymour-v-state-ga-1954.