Court Opinion

ID: 5612763
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 04:06:51.165902+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:37:09.454117
License: Public Domain

Broyles, C. J.
The first headnote alone needs elaboration. The motion for a new trial and the qualifying note of the judge show the following facts: The accused was on trial for murder and was in the custody of the sheriff. All the evidence had been introduced and the defendant’s statement made before the noon recess of the court. During the recess the defendant was placed in jail by the sheriff, and through oversight the sheriff failed to bring him back in the court-room when the court reconvened. During the defendant’s absence the following occurred: The jury were brought in and argument ordered to proceed. The solicitor-general announced that he would waive his opening argument, whereupon counsel for the accused insisted that the solicitor-general should state his contentions in the case. The solicitor-general then arose and stated to the jury: “ Gentlemen, I will not read you any law, but will contend in my concluding argument that under the testimony in this case the defendant should be found guilty.” At this point the attention of the court was called to the absence of the defendant, and the proceedings were immediately suspended until the defendant was brought in — which was done, within two minutes. When the court reconvened after the noon recess the judge noticed a negro sitting where the prisoners usually sit, and did not detect that he was not the defendant until his attention was directed to it.
It has repeatedly and uniformly been held by this court and the Supreme Court that upon a criminal trial the accused has a constitutional right to be present at every stage of the proceedings *19from his arraignment or waiver thereof to the rendition and recording of the verdict; and in many cases new trials have been ordered because of the involuntary absence of the accused during some stage of his trial. In Mills v. State, 23 Ga. App. 14 (97 S. E. 825). Judge Bloodworth carefully collated a number of such cases. In all of those cases, however, something important and of vital interest to the defendant’s cause occurred during his absence, such as charging or recharging the jury, reading testimony to the jury, the argument of counsel for the State, or the rendering of the verdict. The case most nearly like the instant case is Tiller v. State, 96 Ga. 430 (23 S. E. 825). There, however, the solicitor-general proceeded with his argument while the defendant was involuntarily absent, while in the present case the brief statement to the jury made by the solicitor-general in the al sence of the defendant could not properly or reasonably be called an “ argument.” It amounted to no more in substance than a statement that the argument of the State would be made after the argument of counsel for the accused; and even this brief statement was made at the request of the defendant’s counsel. This statement of the solicitor-general, made in the absence of the defendant, was not important or vital to the latter’s cause, and it is obvious that he was not injured thereby and that there was no substantial violation of his constitutional right to be present during every stage of his trial.
It is true that in several decisions of this court and of the Supreme Court it is declared that in such cases it is immaterial whether or not the accused was injured by what occurred during his absence — since he had an undoubted right to be present during every stage of his trial. These sweeping expressions, however, except as applied to the particular facts of those cases, are clearly obiter, and therefore are not binding in cases where the facts are somewhat different, and we cannot agree that they are correct in all cases where the defendant is involuntarily absent for a brief period during his trial. We concede that the accused has an undoubted right to be present during every minute or second of his trial and to see and hear everything that there transpires, but we do not think that a mere technical violation of this right in every instance, where it is clear that no injury to him results, requires a new trial. Suppose, for example, in this case, the judge had reconvened the court after the noon recess, had the jury brought *20into their box, and ordered the argument to proceed, but, before one word had been said by counsel for either'side, had noticed the absence of the accused and had suspended all proceedings until he was brought in, would any court, under such circumstances, hold that a new trial was demanded? And yet the defendant had an undoubted right to be present at the reconvening of the court, to see the jury file into their box, and to hear the judge order the argument to proceed. The real answer is that under those particular facts there was no substantial violation of the defendant’s constitutional rights, and another trial was not required. We have been cited to no decision, and have been unable to find one, where a new trial was ordered because of the brief involuntary absence of the accused, during his trial under circumstances identical in degree with those of this case, and we do not feel inclined to extend the rule laid down in previous decisions. The present tendency of the reviewing courts is to refuse to set aside the judgment of the trial court in such cases unless it appears that there was a substantial violation of this constitutional right of the defendant. In a recent decision of the Supreme Court (Williams v. State, 150 Ga. 641, 104 S. E. 776) it was said: “It is certainly an important right of the accused in a criminal case, where his life and liberty are involved, to be present at all stages of the trial; but this cannot mean that if anything at all is done in his absence a new trial is required. Suppose that on the morning when this argument was begun the court had merely said, ‘Let the trial proceed,’ and then counsellor the accused, observing that his client was absent, had said to the court, ‘ I desire, while the prisoner is being brought in, to make a motion to the court,’ and had then made some motion, such as to reopen the evidence or to rule out certain evidence which had been a.dduced, and the court had stated, ‘We will wait till the prisoner comes in.’ Certainly in one sense of the word something had been done in the trial and one step in the trial had been taken in the absence of the prisoner; but would any one insist that this should work a new trial upon motion made therefor. We apprehend that it would be held, in the case supposed, that counsel had waived the prisoner’s presence, and, moreover, that what was said and done was not a substantial violation of the constitutional right to be present during all stages of the trial.”

Judgment affirmed.

Luke and Bloodworth, JJ., concur.