Oliver v. State

Supreme Court of Georgia
Oliver v. State, 106 Ga. 142 (Ga. 1898)
32 S.E. 18; 1898 Ga. LEXIS 38
Lewis

Oliver v. State

Opinion of the Court

Lewis, J.

J. W. Oliver was indicted by the grand jury of Bibb county, for carrying about his person not in an open man*143ner and fully exposed to view a pistol. The testimony relied, upon by the State for a conviction was, briefly and substantially,. as follows: The defendant while riding in his buggy on a public highway ran into a buggy occupied by the prosecutor and' his wife. A quarrel ensued as the result of this accident. The ■ defendant got out of his buggy, cursed and abused the prosecutor, pulled off his coat, and from a pocket, where it was concealed on his person, drew his pistol and pointed it at the prosecutor. This happened in Bibb county on- January 22, 1898. This testimony of the prosecutor was corroborated by his wife and by another witness who saw the difficulty. The defendant was convicted, and to the judgment of the court overruling his motion for a new trial he excepts. Besides the general grounds in the motion, error is alleged on the- refusal of the-court to postpone or continue the case on- account of the absence-of a witness bj whom defendant expected to prove that on many-occasions just prior to the time when the crime charged against-him is alleged to have been committed, he rode in the buggy with defendant from defendant’s home to town in the afternoons, and back from town to defendant’s home in the mornings, and that it was the defendant’s invariable custom on-, said occasions, when witness was with him, to carry his pistol on his buggy-seat by his side, and only in that way. Error is further assigned on the ruling of the court in excluding the testimony of a witness who was present; and by whom the defendant proposed to prove that it was- the habitual custom of' defendant, for some weeks prior to-the time charged in the indictment, to carry his pistol on the seat- of his buggy by his side. Neither of these witnesses was present at the time of the difficulty.

We think the court properly excluded this testimony; for ■ the same was entirely immaterial-, and could have thrown no light whatever upon the issue involved. It is true that under some circumstances the habit or custom of a person may be given in evidence in his favor, whenever such habit might explain a bare circumstance which >vould otherwise tend to establish a link in the chain of evidence against him. Hence it was ruled in the case of White v. State, 100 Ga. 659, that where *144it became a material inquiry as to whether a person slain had fired his pistol in the progress of a rencounter which resulted in his death, it was competent to show that the deceased was accustomed to carry the hammer , of his pistol on an empty ■cartridge. In that case it would seem that the defendant relied on the fact that, the pistol of the deceased being found with the hammer on an empty cartridge, this was a circumstance tending to show the deceased had fired his pistol before he was shot. As an explanation of this bare circumstance, the .'State was allowed to show the habit of deceased in carrying, his pistol with the hammer xipon an empty cartridge. Justice Atkinson, in delivering the opinion of the court, on page 669, says: “It would seem to be slight of itself, and entitled to little weight, but it is nevertheless competent, and may be properly considered by the jury in connection with all the ■other testimony which bore upon the question as to whether the deceased had in fact discharged his pistol during the progress of the rencounter.” The question presented by the record in this case, however, is entirely different. The defendant seeks to overcome positive proof of his guilt at a particular time and place by showing that on other occasions, and under other circumstances, he did not carry his pistol concealed. He was not indicted for habitually carrying a concealed weapon, and it is to be presumed that, even when proved guilty of violating the statute on a particular occasion, such conduct would constitute an exception in his life, and would not tend to establish a habit. Besides, the testimony offered would only have gone to the extent of showing how the defendant usually carried his pistol while riding in his'buggy with another party! It was not under these circumstances that the State claims to have found him with a concealed weapon, but it was after he had left his buggy, and was upon the ground for the purpose of having a personal difficulty with the prosecutor. It was, therefore, entirely consistent with his alleged habit for him to have taken the pistol from the seat before leaving the buggy and placed it in his pocket. The evidence rejected by the court, therefore, not only could have thrown no light upon the guilt or innocence of the defendant, but *145could not properly have been considered, even had it been admitted, as tending to impeach the State’s witnesses, or in the remotest degree impairing their credit. A case more directly in point than that relied upon by plaintiff in error in the 100 Ga., above referred to, is that of Washington v. State, 36 Ga. 242, where it was decided that “When a defendant is indicted for having or carrying concealed weápons at a particular time and place, it is not competent for him to introduce evidence upon the trial to prove that it was his general habit to carry his weapon about his person openly exposed to view.” Warner, C. J., delivering the opinion in that case, says: “Was the pistol intentionally carried concealed upon his person at the time charged? This question must be answered by the facts proved at that time, by the witnesses who saw them, and not by the general habits of-the defendant in carrying his pistol at other times.”

The brief recital of facts above given shows that the verdict was not contrary to evidence, and that there is no merit whatever in the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.

Judgment affirmed.

A ll the Justices concurring.

Reference

Full Case Name
OLIVER v. State
Status
Published