Tiget v. State
This text of 34 S.E. 1023 (Tiget 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.
Opinion
1. It was error, in the trial of one charged with murder, to admit, over proper objection by defendant, the evidence of a witness-introduced by the State, to the effect that, a day or two previously to the homicide, witness asked the deceased when he was coming to see him; that deceased replied he did not know, that he might be dead. [245]*245before he got a chance to come, that he expected to be hilled, and-, that the man he expected to do it lived two or three steps from his door. Woolf oik v. State 81 Ga. 552; s. c. 85 Ga. 69.
[245]*2452. While the presiding judge in the trial of a criminal case may, in the exercise of a sound discretion, require the accused to omit from his statement reference to entirely irrelevant matters, it is not contemplated by the statute that he shall be embarrassed and circumscribed by the rules which control the admissibility of evidence. Hackney v. State, 101 Ga. 512.
"3. The language of the charge as set out in two grounds’ of the amended motion for a new trial may be susceptible of a construction that it contains an intimation of an opinion by the judge as to what had been proved, and should therefore not have been used.
Judgment reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
34 S.E. 1023, 110 Ga. 244, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiget-v-state-ga-1900.