Court Opinion

ID: 4917261
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-22 00:11:30.679007+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:55.065741
License: Public Domain

Cockrell, J.
Hester Stone was indicted in the Circuit Court for Walton County for murder in the first degree, by cutting to death with a knife one Nancy Campbell. She was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced to life imprisonment.
Upon her arraignment at the Spring term,' 1908, she was granted at her instance a continuance to the then ensuing Fall term and upon being put to trial at that term she moved a further continuance upon the ground of the absence of a witness, and the refusal of this continuance constitutes the first assignment of error. We find no abuse of discretion in the denial of the motion.
The testimony she expected to procure was the evidence of one A. H. Hilson, the committing officer, to the effect that the principal State witness had made at the preliminary hearing a statement different from that given by her at the trial. No proper predicate was laid for the impeaching evidence, there were numerous other witnesses present at the preliminary hearing who might have been called had the proper predicate been laid, and the necessity of an adjournment to another term to secure Hilson’s presence is not sufficiently shown. Other objections might be urged and multiplied.
The court gave the statutory definition of murder in the second degree and this is assigned for error. There was no error here. Our statutory definition of manslaughter is reached by a process of exclusion, being in substance an unlawful killing which is not murder in *30any of its degrees, and to define it correctly to the jury it is proper to give the statutory definitions of murder, even though the evidence may not make out strictly a case of one of the higher crimes.
In the charge of the court upon the crime of manslaughter charged in the indictment along with that of murder, there appeared in the original transcript a clerical misprision, in that it permitted the jury to find mauslaugther when the facts hypothesized would justify a verdict of murder in the first degree, but this slip did not in fact exist as shown by the corrected copy of the charges now of file before us.
There was credible evidence from which the jury might have found a verdict of murder in the first degree and under the statute we shall not disturb the one rendered.
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur, except Parichill, J., absent on account of illness.