Stewart v. State

66 Ga. 90
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 Ga. 90 (Stewart 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
Stewart v. State, 66 Ga. 90 (Ga. 1880).

Opinions

Speer, Justice.

At the May term, 1880, the accused, W. F. Stewart, was tried and convicted in Glynn superior court, of the offense of assault with intent to murder one W. F. Mc-Iver, alleged to have been committed in said county on the 10th of December, 1879.

Defendant was found guilty, and at same term a mo-. tion was made for a new trial on various grounds of error alleged to have been committed by the court, asare,, [91]*91set forth in the record, and the same having been overruled by the court, error is assigned in this court on each, of said grounds.

The question is, did the presiding judge err in his judgment overruling said motion on the grounds therein contained ; for, unless we are satisfied error was committed by him, we have no authority in law to disturb this verdict or to arrest its consequences to the accused — whatever may be our sympathy for the unfortunate position in. which he is placed.

Before entering upon a discussion of the legal questions involved in this record, it will aid that investigation to give a brief summary of the evidence in this case as found in the record.

It appears that in 1879 the accused, Stewart, and Mclver —upon whom the alleged crime was committed — resided in Brunswick; that Mclver was a nephew of the brother-in-law of Stewart, and having been well known to him from his early boyhood, was treated with the confidence and intimacy of a family connection.

It further appears, on the 10th of December, 1879, Brunswick, while Mclver was standing near Nelson’s corner talking and laughing with three other friends, Stewart suddenly appeared in their midst, drew his pistol and opened fire on Mclver; that he shot at him four times, hitting him twice, the second and fourth shot, once in the side then in the'neck, from which last shot Mclver was knocked down and fell in the street bleeding and unconscious. The bystanders saw Mclver have no pistol nor did he shoot. Such are the facts as testified to by the eyewitnesses present, and having proven these facts the state closed. The defendant introduced no evidence, but made “his statement,” in substance as follows:

“I have known Mclver since he was nine or ten years old. In October last I moved to where I now live. One evening in that month I went home and found my wife in tears — “said she had been grossly insulted by Mclver” [92]*92—without asking particulars I went to seek a weapon. Met Mclver, called him aside, cursed and abused him, he stood trembling, and when train came along went away on it. When I returned home my wife gave me particulars— said “Mclver had thrown her on the bed and attempted to violate her person and did not desist till she threatened to tell me, and she had torn his coat in the struggle.” I sought to find him after this. My wife begged me “to-have no difficulty with him.” I wrote him if he did not leave town in twenty-four hours, would prosecute him— he refused to go. I met him twice after this (but was unarmed both times) once at post-office and once at Madden’s store.

On ioth of December I received a printed invitation to-attend' a ball to be given on evening of nth, Mclver’s name was on the printed card with two others as a committee of invitation — one of them, Hazelhurst, was my wife’s cousin. I went to see Hazelhurst to remonstrate with him about being in such company. I was very much excited — saw Mclver standing with others at Nelson’s store — walked up to him and said,, “you infernal villain we have met at last,” and fired on him, at my fourth shot he fell — between my third and fourth shot he got out his pistol but it went off in the air.

In rebuttal of this statement Mclver, sworn, denied any attempted outrage on Mrs. Stewart, wife of accused, admits he had, at her request, waited on- her to parties, dances, etc., and at her repeated invitations by note had visited her house. This, by her conduct and advances, had resulted in a criminal intimacy between them at divers times at her house — -says he tried to stop it and she persisted — until at last he wrote her a nóte declining further to see her, and she wrote him threatening if he did not visit her she would expose everything to her husband. He believes her husband got hold of his note which caused the exposure and led to first interview spoken of by the accused between them. That in that [93]*93interview, when accused cursed him, he struck him in reply and made a motion as if to draw a pistol. That accused asked him to keep affair secret, and as the train came along on which he was employed, he got on it and went off. He says — saw accused at various times between that interview and 10th of December, when assault was made on him — never spoke to each other — saw him on the streets almost daily when he was at home — that he was wholly unprepared for the attack made on him. His age is nineteen and that of the wife of accused about thirty. The testimony of this witness, as to seeing and being seen by ac cused on the streets, was corroborated by another witness, and one witness testified as to taking a note from Mrs. Stewart to Mclver while he, Mclver, was on the train sometime before the shooting.

Such, in brief, is a summary of the material evidence submitted on the trial — -upon which the jury, under the charge of the court, found the accused guilty, and on a motion being made for a new trial, which was refused by the court, we are called upon to review this judgment and to determine whether the same is correct.

The motion for a new trial embraces nineteen grounds of error. The first three are because, (1st.) the verdict is contrary to evidence; (2d.) is contrary to law' — and (3d.) contrary to the principles of justice and equity. The next fifteen grounds are based upon alleged errors contained in the charge of the court — the incompetency certain jurors whose names did not appear on the jury list, and the last and nineteenth ground upon newly discovered testimony — discovered since, and not known to accused or his counsel at the trial.

1. We do not deem it necessary to discuss the three first grounds of this motion. That the act was committed by the accused is established beyond question and not contradicted by him in his statement but admitted, and whether it was justified under the circumstances, or mitigated and reduced to an offense of milder grade, was a [94]*94question the court left to the jury, and with their verdict we find no cause of com'plaint under our view of the evidence.

2. The question also as to the competency of some jurors who were on the trial of this cause, and whose names were not selected by the jury commissioners, and names not on the jury list, we regard the question as settled by former decisions of this court against the plaintiff in error.

3. There were three points made and mainly relied upon in the argument before this court, to-wit: the eighth, tenth and nineteenth grounds of the motion, which we think it proper to notice — two of them as being alleged errors in the charge of the court, and the last of newly discovered testimony. The eighth was because the court charged the jury, in connection with his charge relative to the prisoner’s statement, as follows :

“If you find it is not true, reject it. You do the same by all evidence — but sworn testimony you have no right captiously to reject unless impeached in some way.” . .

In the recent case of Jones vs.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Ga. 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-state-ga-1880.