Solomon v. State

58 S.E. 381, 2 Ga. App. 92, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 24, 1907
Docket367
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 381 (Solomon 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
Solomon v. State, 58 S.E. 381, 2 Ga. App. 92, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 284 (Ga. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Russell, J.

Mark Solomon was indicted for the offense of murder, and was convicted of the offense of manslaughter. After conviction a motion for new trial was made and was overruled;, and the bill of exceptions assigns error upon the judgment refusing a new trial. As appears from the record, the defendant and one Oscar Newman had an altercation on the night of November 15, 1885, in which Newman was cut in the side; and Newman died [93]*93•three days later from the effects of the wound. They were returning home along the road after having called on some young girls. Newmán was about eighteen years of age, Solomon perhaps .a little younger. A dispute arose about an apple which Solomon or Newman had given to one of the .young ladies that evening, "both of them having given an apple to the same young girl. Four • of the young men were going along the road together, — -Newman, ■ Solomon, Henry Dixon, and J. T. Grimsley. Grimsley had given .an apple to Newman, and he asked Newman what-he did with the apple he gave him. Newman replied, “I gave it to my girl.” 'The defendant remarked that a respectable girl would not take an apple from a young man. Newman then said, “Yes, I’ve given her baskets full.” Solomon again said- that no respectable young lady would take an apple from a young man. Newman said, “My sisters are respectable.” Then Solomon said, “You must be a dam fool,” and Newman struck Solomon across the shoulders with a •walking-cane. As he did so, Solomon made a back-handed lick, .as they were walking side by side. As soon as the lick was made, Newman said, “Boys, he has cut me.” They were at the fence where Newman turned off'to go through the field. Dixon and ■Grimsley went with Newman through the field. The defendant went on home. Newman had gone only a little way in .the field before he had to lie down. Help was summoned from his home, .and he was carried there. Newman said, “He has cut me.” Sol- - onion picked up a limb' lying in the road and drew it back and said, “If you haven’t enough, I’ll give you enough.” The cane with which Newman struck Solomon was a little limber cane about the size of a finger. It was not a stick that one could kill another •with. Newman lived three days and three nights.

According to the witness Grimsley, Dixon and himself were walking together, and the defendant and the deceased .were also walking together; but the evidence does not disclose which couple was ahead of the other. The first thing that attracted Grimsley’s attention was that Solomon called Newman a “damn fool,” and all ■■stopped. The next thing that occurred was that Newman struck 'Solomon with the little walking-cane, and the next was a backhanded lick from Solomon, and Newman’s exclamation that he was cut. Grimsley did not see any knife. Awas at night, and, -though the moon was shining, it was cloudy.* The State proved [94]*94the dying statement of the deceased, by Jesse Newman, his father. This statement was as follows: “You heard me and Dixon as we were going down to Mrs. Jesup’s. You heard me shaking the apples off the trees. I gave one to one of the girls. On the return back home Mr. Solomon got in a dispute about it. He ran under me and cut me. As he cut me I struck him with that little cane.” The wound was in the abdomen of the deceased, about opposite the navel and about two inches long, ranging downwards. It did not go straight in. This is the case on the part of 'the State. The defendant’s statement was, that the deceased struck him with a stick, and that he then reached down and took up a limb and drew it back at the defendant, who was approaching him with his knife drawn, having pulled it from his left-hand pocket; and that he, Solomon, hit Newman over the head with the limb, and Newman ducked down, and as he went down he said, “I am cut;” and then Newman got up, shut his knife up, and put it in his pocket. Solomon’s contention about the knife was that if Newman was cut he cut himself.

The defendant was indicted shortly after the killing, but for some reason, not disclosed by the record, he was not tried for more than twentjr-one years. He moved for a new trial, upon various grounds. In the first assignment of error it is insisted that the judge erred in saying, in the presence of the jury, while ruling upon the admissibility of certain testimony relative to the dying declaration of Oscar Newman, “The rule is this, the meaning of the law is this: that when a man feels like he is in a dying condition and makes a statement, it has the same weight as if made under oath; upon the theory that a man in a dying condition would not misrepresent a fact.” It is insisted, that this language contained an erroneous statement of the law as to the weight and effect of a dying declaration, and was calculated to impress the jury that the deceased would not misrepresent the facts of the difficulty which occurred between him and defendant; and that the statement of the court amounted to an expression of opinion, in the presence of the jury, upon the evidence. We do not think that the assignment of error is well taken. The court correctly stated the reason underlying the admissibility of dying declarations. There was no expjBssion or intimation of opinion as to wha!' weight the jury shopd give the evidence, in saying that such state [95]*95-mente are admitted “upon the theory that a man in a dying eondi-tion would not misrepresent a fact.”

The second assignment of error complains that the court charged ■the law of voluntary manslaughter, and read to the jury, as a part -of the charge on that subject, section 65 of the Penal Code. The plaintiff .in error insists that the court, by reading the entire section, gave the jury the impression that voluntary and involuntary manslaughter were one and the same thing, and could have prevented the jury from bringing in a verdict of involuntary manslaughter; and the plaintiff in error insists further that the judge should not have charged upon the subject of voluntary manslaughter at all. This assignment is absolutely without merit. All the evidence in the ease shows a sudden quarrel; and not to have charged upon the subject of voluntary manslaughter would have been manifest error. It would have been more proper to omit the •definition of involuntary manslaughter, contained in section 65; .as no view of the case rendered a charge upon involuntary manslaughter applicable; but the error, if any, was certainly harmless.

There is no merit in the third ground, in which exception is taken to the charge of the court. The portions of the charge excepted to in the fourth, fifth, and sixth grounds of the amended motion are correct presentations of principles of law applicable to the facts of the case.

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Related

Bryant v. State
163 S.E. 219 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 381, 2 Ga. App. 92, 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solomon-v-state-gactapp-1907.