Smith v. State

27 S.E.2d 369, 196 Ga. 595, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 407
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 9, 1943
Docket14625.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 27 S.E.2d 369 (Smith 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
Smith v. State, 27 S.E.2d 369, 196 Ga. 595, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 407 (Ga. 1943).

Opinions

1. The ground of the motion for new trial complaining that the court overruled the motion to continue is without merit, when it did not unequivocally appear that the witness whose absence was the basis of the motion for continuance had been subpoenaed, counsel for the accused not asking that an attachment issue against the witness, but requesting the court to have a subpoena issued, requiring the absent witness to appear at once, and to have an officer serve it; the witness living in a county adjoining the county of the trial; it further appearing that in overruling the motion the court directed that a subpoena be issued for the witness, and it was issued and delivered to an officer who, later in the afternoon of the same day, reported that he had tried to locate the witness but was unable to do so; the evidence of the absent witness relating to a fact as to which several other witnesses for the accused testified, who were present in the court.

2. It was not cause for new trial that the court admitted in evidence certain pans which the witness, the sheriff, testified he found in the *Page 596 kitchen of the house where the deceased was shot, that the pans were shot through, the bullets or slugs going through them into the walls of the kitchen, and that he had kept them in a vault since the day of the killing; the pans containing holes which the jury were authorized to believe were put there from shots made by the accused at the time of the killing.

3. A ground of the motion complains of the admission in evidence of a pistol which, as a witness testified, the accused left on the counter in his store very shortly after the killing, and before he was arrested; and that he came into his store and laid it on the counter, "and wheeled and ran out and kept going." While the evidence for the State showed that the killing was done with a shotgun picked up by the accused in the house where he did the killing, the admission in evidence of the pistol left by the accused in the manner stated was not sufficiently immaterial and irrelevant, as not illustrating any issue in the case, to justify a new trial; the fact of the killing by the accused not being denied, but only the defense of his inability to distinguish between right and wrong being relied on.

4. No error is shown in the ground which contends that, after both the State and the accused had closed their evidence, the State was permitted to offer certain evidence which was not "in rebuttal to anything that the defendant brought out," it being in the discretion of the court so to do.

5. That the judge in beginning his charge stated that the grand jurors charged and accused the prisoner with the offense of murder, "for that he did then and there unlawfully, and with force and arms, feloniously and with malice aforethought, kill and murder one Virginia Smith, by shooting her, the said Virginia Smith, with a certain shotgun, contrary to the laws of said State, peace and dignity thereof," did not intimate or express any opinion upon the facts of the case.

6. The ground which complains that the court erred in charging the jury, "In other words, murder is the intentional killing of a human being, or the killing of a human being by the intentional use of a weapon that as used is likely to kill, and killing without justification or mitigation," is without merit as not being a correct statement of the law, in that it excluded any excuse for the killing and excluded the defense of insanity.

7. The ground contending that the court erred in failing to give in charge section 26-1005 of the Code, in relation to punishment of persons convicted of murder, is without merit; the entire charge being in the record and disclosing that the judge fully and fairly charged the jury on this subject.

8. Nor were the extracts from the charge in relation thereto confusing, as contended by movant.

9. Nor was the charge on this subject erroneous because the judge failed to charge the jury that in the event they should convict the defendant of murder, they "would have the right and the power, with or without reason, arbitrarily, as a matter of grace, to recommend that the defendant be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary for life."

10. The alleged newly discovered evidence related to an issue on which several *Page 597 witnesses for the defendant had already testified, to wit, the question of the insanity of the accused, and presented no reason for granting a new trial.

11. It is not error of which the accused can complain that, notwithstanding the absence of any defense of delusional insanity, the judge, after charging generally on the defense of insanity, added: "There is an exception to this general rule, and that is where a man has reason sufficient to distinguish between right and wrong as to a particular act about to be committed, yet in consequence of some delusion his will is overmastered, and there is no criminal intent; provided that the act itself is connected with the peculiar delusion under which he is laboring. In that case the man would not be criminally responsible for such act. If a man should be laboring under some delusion, but that delusion should not be connected with the criminal act charged; or if the delusion should not overmaster his will, and it amounted to criminal intent, he would be criminally responsible for such act."

12. The evidence justified the verdict; and the same having received the approval of the trial judge, it was not erroneous to refuse a new trial.

No. 14625. SEPTEMBER 9, 1943. REHEARING DENIED OCTOBER 3, 1943.
Jack Smith was indicted for the offense of murdering his wife, Virginia Smith, by shooting her with a shotgun. He and she were not living together at the time; she had left him two or three months before, and was living with her parents. The evidence showed that the accused came to that home and begged his wife to return to him. Her grandmother, who was there, testified that she advised her to go with him, and she then said, "I will go with him." The accused was outside of the house, but he reached through a window and picked up a shotgun belonging to the father of the deceased. They started off and were in the yard, and he began shooting. She kept going around a cedar tree to escape being shot. Finally he shot her in the hip. She ran into the house, and he followed her and kept shooting until he killed her with several shots.

Counsel for the accused admitted in his brief that there was no dispute, so far as the evidence showed, as to the circumstances and manner of the killing, but relied solely on the defense of insanity, or the lack of mental ability on the part of the accused to distinguish between right and wrong. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, without a recommendation. To the overruling of his motion for new trial the defendant excepted. 1-10. Nothing additional will be said here on the rulings made in the first ten headnotes.

11. The defendant made no statement. Certain non-expert witnesses were introduced to testify as to his sanity or insanity, some expressing the view that in their opinion he was insane, and others that he was sane.

The recital appearing above, of the evidence concerning the homicide, justifies the statement in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error, to wit: "There was practically no dispute as to the circumstances of the killing, nor the manner; there being no evidence as to the actual killing other than that introduced by the State, and that showed a brutal, uncalled-for, unprovoked killing. The contention made for the defendant was that the defendant did not have sufficient mind to know the difference between right and wrong." There was nothing in the evidence to suggest the defense of delusional insanity.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.E.2d 369, 196 Ga. 595, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-ga-1943.