Sharpton v. State

57 S.E. 929, 1 Ga. App. 542, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 4, 1907
Docket212
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 57 S.E. 929 (Sharpton v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharpton v. State, 57 S.E. 929, 1 Ga. App. 542, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 35 (Ga. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Hill, C. J.

The plaintiff in error was indicted in Richmond superior court for the crime of assault with intent to 'murder. On his trial, the solicitor-general abandoned the charge of assault with [543]*543intent to murder, and asked for a conviction for the offense of shooting at another. The court withdrew from the consideration of the jury the higher felony, and submitted the lower grade of the offense. The jury convicted the defendant of shooting at another, whereupon he filed a motion for a new trial, which was refused, and a writ of error brought to this court. Numerous errors of law are assigned; but after a careful consideration of each one of them, we are clearly of the opinion that only two are meritorious. We do not deem it necessary to pass upon those which we consider are without merit, as none of them are novel, or involve any question of general interest. For a clear understanding of the two errors of law which we think imperatively demand a new trial, the issues made by the evidence should be stated.

The testimony for the State presents substantially the following case: On the day named in the indictment, the prosecutor, Walter McDonald, a boy fourteen years of age, with a companion thirteen years of age, went to the watermelon patch of the defendant for the purpose of taking a melon to eat. It was in the afternoon, between sundown and dark. While they were in the patch, and before they had taken any melon, without being hailed or ordered off, the defendant shot Walter McDonald in the face with a shotgun, putting-out both of his eyes. Both boys positively identified the defendant. The same afternoon, a few hours before the shooting, the defendant had expressed his suspicion that Walter McDonald was taking his melons, and that he intended to give him “a dose of shot.” There was also evidence that one barrel of the defendant’s shotgun indicated that it had^ been recently shot, and that tracks similar to his were made in the melon patch near the place where the boy was shot. If these facts were true, a verdict would have been authorized for the higher felony. The threat to shoot, the preparation to carry out the threat, the speedy execution of the threat, the deliberate firing at the face of the boy twenty-five or thirty feet distant, without warning and without ordering him off the premises, indicate a'crime deliberately planned and cruelly executed. The defendant contended that he was not guilty. He said that he did not do the shooting; that he had no knowledge thereof until the day following, when he heard of it first from some friend who had read an account of the shooting in the.newspaper. He denied that he made the threat to shoot. He set up an alibi, and proved it by the' [544]*544testimony of several members of his family. He showed, by the testimony of neighbors and friends, that the tracks in the watermelon patch near the place of the shooting were not made by him; that cobwebs were in the muzzle of both barrels and around the locks and hammers of his gun, and that rust was in the barrels; and it was contended that these facts and circumstances, with his-proof of an alibi, and the darkness of the night at the time of the shooting, with evidence introduced by him that he had not made-the threat which was sworn to by one of the witnesses for the State,, prove that he was innocent of the crime.

The foregoing statement substantially sets forth the contentions, of the State and the defendant, and it is seen how vitally important it was that the evidence submitted in behalf of the defendant-should go to the jury handicapped by no expression or intimation on the part of the court that would impair its full force and effect, or prevent a free and impartial consideration thereof. The charge of the court, in submitting these contentions to the jury,, can not be justly criticized in any respect. It was clear, comprehensive, accurate, and impartial. Throughout the entire trial, the scales of justice were held with even and steady hand, except in the two instances to which we will now call particular attention.

1. The identity of the person committing the crime was the vital question in the case. In addition to the facts and circumstances, shown by the defendant as above narrated, which had been admitted as evidence for the jury to consider, he offered to prove, by several witnesses, that certain shells which he produced to them contained shot of a size different from those taken from the wounded boy. These witnesses had been called in by the defendant, and had been actively assisted by him in their investigation into all the facts- and circumstances of the case. The testimony relating to the shells was objected to on the ground that they had been furnished by the defendant to the witnesses, and that this was an act of his. in his own favor, subsequent to the commission of the offense, and,, 'therefore, the testimony was not admissible. The court in ruling out the.evidence, made use of the following language: “Their investigations were certainly not made adversely to the defendant’s-interest, and it was not the investigation that an officer of the law, looking for proof of guilt, would make. They were made at his instance and in his presence. He had a right to exclude them [545]*545from his premises; he had a right to keep them from searching in his house.' As I understand it, he was aiding all these neighbors.’’ The errors complained of in the foregoing ruling were pointed out as follows: (1) Because the ruling was tantamount to an expression of an opinion, in that it gave a greater weight to the testimony of the officers of the law than to that of defendant’s witnesses. (2) Because the testimony of defendant’s witnesses was discredited on account of the presence of defendant during the investigation made by the neighbors. (3) Because the court expressed an opinion in stating that their investigation was certainly not made adversely to the defendant’s interest. (4) Because the ruling, in effect, made every act of the witnesses, throughout their entire investigation, the act of the defendant. (5) Because the effect of the ruling was to preclude the jury from considering all the testimony offered in behalf of the defendant, in the same unhampered manner as that introduced by the State. (6) Because it was an intimation of an opinion by the court that the defendant had attempted to manufacture his defense.

After a most careful consideration of these objections, we are constrained to hold that the remarks of the learned court in announcing his ruling, are justly subject to the criticisms made. To see the full force of the objections, it must be remembered that the circumstances of the tracks and the condition of the gun, which the defendant insisted indicated that he was not guilty, had been testified to by these neighbors; and these, facts had been controverted by the State, by the testimony of a policeman who made an examination of the gun and the tracks, in connection with a deputy sheriff. Both sides of the contention had been placed before the jury. In excluding the testimony of the shells, on the ground that the defendant could not introduce in evidence any statement or act of his subsequent to the alleged offense, it was certainly a very serious disparagement of the testimony of the defendant’s neighbors, who were his witnesses, to characterize their investigations as having been made in his interest, at hiá instance, and in his presence and with his assistance, and to go still further and state that such investigations were not those that an officer of'the law would make, looking for proof of guilt.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.E. 929, 1 Ga. App. 542, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharpton-v-state-gactapp-1907.