Teasley v. Nelson

138 S.E. 72, 164 Ga. 242, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 3, 1927
DocketNo. 5704
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 138 S.E. 72 (Teasley v. Nelson) 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
Teasley v. Nelson, 138 S.E. 72, 164 Ga. 242, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 164 (Ga. 1927).

Opinions

Hill, J.

Fred Teasley brought a petition for habeas corpus against B. F. Nelson as warden of Whitfield County chain-gang, on October 30, 1926, praying that the warden be required to produce the body of Fred Teasley before Judge M. C. Tarver, together with the cause of the plaintiff’s detention, etc. On November 1, 1926, the respondent produced the body of the plaintiff, and filed his answer. On the hearing of the case the plaintiff introduced certain orders of the court .sentencing the plaintiff in three certain cases against him in Whitfield superior court; one for carrying a pistol in two counts, wherein the court ordered that Fred Teasley “do work on the State farm for and during the full term of six months, and on the chain-gang for and during the full term of six-months on the first count of said indictment; and that on the second count he serve on the chain-gang for and during the full term of twelve months, and then be discharged. Said sentence to begin and be counted from the date of the reception of the defendant on State farm under this order and judgment. Sentence pronounced and signed in open court this April 12, 1924. M. C. Tarver, J. S. C. C. C.” At the October 'term, 1924, of Whitfield superior court, in the ease of The State v. Fred Teasley, the jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of assault with intent to murder, and fix his sentence at not less than two or more than two years and one day. This 8 day of October, 1924. J. L. Hinton, foreman.” This verdict was entered upon the minutes of the court. On January 8, 1925, in term, Judge Tarver entered the following judgment in [244]*244the case in which Teasley had entered aa plea of guilty of possessing whisky: “Whereupon it is considered, sentenced, and adjudged by the court, that Fred Teasley do work in the chain-gang on the public works, or in such other works as the lawful authorities may employ the chain-gang, for and during the full term of twelve months to begin at the expiration of the two sentences now being served from this court for carrying pistol and shooting wife, and then be discharged. And it is further ordered that this sentence begin and be counted from the time of the reception of the said defendant in the chain-gang under this order and judgment.” On the hearing the following order of October 28, 1926, with reference to the application of Fred Teasley convicted at the January term, 1925, of the superior court of Whitfield County for possessing whisky, was introduced: “Ordered that the sentence of Fred Teasley be and the same is hereby commuted to present service. Clifford Walker, Governor.” On the trial of the habeas corpus proceeding on November 1, 1926, the court passed the following order in the case of The State v. Fred Teasley, which was an indictment for assault with intent to murder in Whitfield superior court, and a verdict of guilty rendered on October 8, 1924: “Whereupon it is considered, ordered, and adjudged by the court that the defendant, Fred Teasley, be taken to the common jail of said county, and there safely held until called for by guard from penitentiary; and that he shall thereupon be transferred to the State penitentiary, where he shall serve at hard labor, for a term of not less than two years and not more than two years and one day, as fixed by the verdict of the jury. Said sentence to begin from the reception of said defendant in the penitentiary under this order and judgment. This October 8, 1924. M. C. Tarver, J. S. C. C. C.” The following was attached to the order: “It appearing to the court.that the above sentence is a substantial copy of the one imposed by this court on the 8th day of October, 1924, and that the original sentence has been lost prior to the same being recorded in the minutes of this court, it is ordered that the above copy be established and recorded in lieu of the lost original. This November 1, 1926. M. C. Tarver, J. S. C. C. C.”

The plaintifi: objected to the introduction of this judgment, upon the ground that the order establishing it as a correct copy of the original sentence was granted without any evidence having been [245]*245introduced establishing the fact that it was a true copy of the original sentence imposed in the case, plaintiff insisting that the original sentence provided that the sentence of which this purports to be a copy provided that the sentence on this charge should run concurrently with the sentences then being served by the petitioner, basing this insistence upon what is recited in the sentence of the court at the January term, 1925, in the case of The State v. Fred Teasley, charged with possessing whisky. As to this objection the court stated that he remembered the sentence, and that the original sentence did not provide that it was to be served concurrently with the sentences that were at that time being served by petitioner, but that the sentence as originally passed was, as he remembered it, the same as the copy offered in evidence, and that it was true that no evidence was introduced showing what the original sentence contained, but that this copy offered in evidence was established solely on the memory of the judge of the superior court of Whitfield County as to what the original sentence imposed on October 8, 1924, contained. Whereupon the court overruled the objection of petitioner and admitted in evidence the document. To this action of the court the plaintiff in error excepted upon the ground that the established judgment was not legally established as a copy of the original sentence imposed in the case, and that it was void and could not justify the detention of the petitioner in the Whitfield County chain-gang. On the trial of the case the petitioner testified as follows: “I am the petitioner for habeas corpus in this case. The three sentences, in the pistol case imposed in April, 1924, the assault with intent to murder case imposed in October, 1924, and the whisky case imposed in January, 1925, are all the sentences that were to be served by me. I went to the State farm May 3, 1924. I escaped from there June 11, 1924, and was caught and put in the Whitfield County chain-gang m June.27, 1924. I have been in the Whitfield County chain-gang continuously since June 27, 1924. I am still confined there now. Mr. Nelson refuses to release me.” The respondent, B. F. Nelson, offered in evidence the judgment of the court set out above of Oetobr 8, 1924, and which was established by the court on his recollection of what the original sentence contained; and also offered in evidence his sworn answer. At the conclusion of the hearing the court denied the prayers of the petition, and ordered [246]*246that petitioner be remanded to the warden of Whitfield chain-gang. To this judgment the plaintiff excepted.

We are'of the opinion that the court below erred in denying the prayer of plaintiff’s petition, and in remanding him to the warden of Whitfield County chain-gang. It appears from the sentence of the court, pronounced and signed on January 8, 1925, that the plaintiff in error was sentenced, in the case in which he pleaded guilty to possessing whisky, for the term of twelve months, “to begin at the expiration of the two sentences now being served from this court for carrying pistol and shooting wife, and then be discharged.” It thus appears from the above-stated judgment of the court, which was signed and entered upon the minutes of the court, that on January 8, 1925, the plaintiff in error was then serving (concurrently) a sentence for carrying a pistol, and for shooting his wife. See Penal Code (1910), § 1067.

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Related

At & T CORP. v. Sigala
549 S.E.2d 373 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2001)
Teasley v. Nelson
148 S.E. 534 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.E. 72, 164 Ga. 242, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teasley-v-nelson-ga-1927.