Johnson v. State
Johnson v. State
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error is convicted of murder in the second degree. The first error is assigned upon this language of the charge: “ When the evidence shows an intent to kill by the accused, then no words of reproach or abuse whatever are sufficient provocation to free the party killing from murder in the second degree, if it is done by an unlawful act.”
If this language were all of the charge upon the subject it would be error.
We think, taking this entire paragraph of the-charge, which includes the part objected to, the meaning of the court is made distinct and clear, and is consistent with the long and well-established rule in the State.
The evidence of the declaration of James John
While it is desirable, and courts and attorneys-should strive to have it so, that no illegal evidence should go to juries, still we must not overlook the-fact that it is impossible at all times in the progress of a trial to determine questions correctly, and' that mistakes will of course occur. When • such is the case, all that can be done is, that the court shall make the correction, and clearly and plainly explain to the jury. To require more is to require-an impossibility.
The prisoner is in no attitude to make the objection,, as the testimony was never admitted as to him.
It is next objected a juror, ¡¡Potete, had formed' and expressed an opinion. One witness says: “Po-tete said he didn’t see how they could ever get out of or clear of it, according to what he had heard.” Another says he “ heard Potete say he had been summoned as a juror, and he said to me, ‘I told' Hood I was incompetent.’” Another witness says, “Potete talked to me last January during a former trial; said they were trying the Johnson case; said from what he found out that he thought if Johnson didn’t hang they would penitentiary him for life.” A former slave of S. W. Johnson’s father says: “Po-tete said he thought Johnson ought to be sent to the penitentiary for life.”
If we altogether disregard the rebutting statement of Potete, still we do not think there is enough in the record to render him incompetent as a juror. There is nothing from which we are authorized to infer that any of the statements said ¡ to have been made by him were founded upon what purported to be evidence that had been or would be introduced on a trial. No witness in the case is shown to have conversed with him, or in his presence, upon the subject of the accusation, nor does it appear that anyone who heard from the witnesses had conversed with him or in his hearing. So, if we take all that is charged to be true, it came alone from rumor and would not disqualify.
Groat weight must jbe attached to the fact that the judge trying the cause had the witnesses examined before him, saw their j'manner, had the benefit of their modes of expression, and was better prepared to weigh and value their testimony than we who see it only on paper. Besides, it appears that the witness to the strongest expression is discredited.
While the practice of introducing the accused juror to purge himself of offense is reprobated in some of the older cases, we see no sufficient reason for excluding him. That he is charged may go to his credit, but certainly does not disfranchise him. He
The objection that testimony tending • to show a conspiracy to kill, after a former jury had acquitted of murder in the first degree, was admitted, is not well- taken. While such acquittal is a bar to any further prosecution for that offense, it does not operate to exclude evidence of any and all facts touching the killing. Because the evidence may show a higher grade of offense than the one charged, it does' not follow that an offense included in the higher may not be made out by evidence of the higher.
The facts fully warrant the verdict, and the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.