Glenn v. State

Decision Date15 February 1949
Docket Number16457.
Citation52 S.E.2d 319,205 Ga. 32
PartiesGLENN v. STATE.
CourtGeorgia Supreme Court

Rehearing Denied March 16, 1949.

Syllabus by the Court.

It was error to overrule the special ground of the motion for new trial, assigning error on the failure of the court to grant the motion for a mistrial.

Albert Glenn was indicted for the murder of Solomon K. Haddad, and was found guilty without a recommendation of mercy. His motion for new trial, as amended, was overruled, and the exception here is to that judgment.

Counsel for the defendant in their brief waive all issues of law raised by the general grounds of the motion for new trial and the special grounds, except ground 2. This ground asserts that the court erred in failing to grant a mistrial on motion of the defendant on account of certain improper and prejudicial conduct of Mrs. Solomon K. Haddad, the widow of the deceased, before the jury and in the presence of the court. The alleged improper and prejudicial conduct occurred during the closing argument to the jury of the assistant solicitor-general prosecuting the case, and the motion for mistrial was made at the conclusion of the closing argument and before the verdict of the jury was rendered. The recital of facts by counsel for the defendant is in part as follows:

'After the argument of counsel and before the charge to the jury the jury retired and the following occurred:

'Mr Lozier [of counsel for the defendant]: Your Honor, * * * when we adjourned yesterday without concluding the case, Mrs. Haddad asked Solicitor Copeland whether she should come back today and Solicitor Copeland told her yes, to come back, because it would let the jury know she was interested. Now, those are the words Mr. Copeland said and I don't believe he will deny it. Now, today when Brother Copeland started his argument he was standing in front of the jury box, and Mrs. Haddad was sitting a distance of about fifteen or twenty feet at the most from the jury box. She was within the area that is usually limited to jurors and counsel. She was sitting on the front bench right behind counsel table, there being only one bench in this area. Now, within the first five minutes after Brother Carl Copeland started his argument to the jury Mrs. Haddad started weeping. She was in court today dressed in black. She has a white handkerchief and she was weeping in an audible fashion. I could hear it sitting over at the other end of the jury box. I called Your Honor's attention to it and then you asked one of the sheriffs to go over and remove her. The sheriff went over but he did not remove her and she continued weeping. Now, right toward the conclusion of Mr. Copeland's argument to the jury, about fifteen minutes later--she had been weeping off and on during that whole fifteen-minute period--another deputy, evidently instructed by Your Honor, did go to Mrs. Haddad and did secure her removal from the courtroom. As she walked out of the courtroom a distance of about twenty-five or thirty feet from where she was sitting, she passes in close proximity to the edge of the jury box, was holding her handkerchief up to her eyes and nose, and you could hear her sniffling and sobbing from where I was sitting some distance of fifty feet away. I think this kind of thing is most prejudicial to the defendant in this case; and if any of the facts which I have recited need verification, I can put on the stand the two deputies, the first of whom attempted to secure the removal of Mrs. Haddad and the second deputy who was successful, and I can also put on the stand other witnesses in the courtroom who saw Mrs. Haddad weeping in full view of the jury. I think, in the light of the kind of prejudice which could not help but have engendered by the jury seeing this widow dressed in black, her feeling, as much as I hate to do so, I will have to ask for a mistrial.

'The Court: Your factual statement is correct, except it was not fifteen minutes since you made your request that she went out. It was about five minutes until she went out.

'Mr. Lozier: It seemed like fifteen to me.

'The Court: The first deputy went over there and she did cease using her handkerchief, and when she used it again I requested the other deputy to ask her to step into the hall, and she did. And courtrooms, of course, are filled with human emotions. I have seen cases when lawyers were arguing to the jury, jurors would start crying. I don't think there has been any harm done in this case. Overrule the motion.'

It is contended that no effort of any kind was made by the court to eradicate the injury done to the defendant by this conduct on the part of the widow of the deceased, the court giving no instructions that the conduct was improper, and that the jury should disregard the conduct, and the court giving no rebuke to Mrs. Haddad; and that such conduct was prejudicial to the defendant for the following reasons: it was such as to arouse in the jury sympathy for the widow and revengeful feeling toward the defendant, to arouse in the jury a feeling of hatred toward the defendant, and to inject into the trial feelings and emotions from which the jury should have been free in order to calmly and dispassionately decide the...

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15 cases
  • Gibbins v. State
    • United States
    • Georgia Court of Appeals
    • December 3, 1997
    ...closing argument. The record does not show that their actions disrupted the court or otherwise affected the jury. Compare Glenn v. State, 205 Ga. 32, 34, 52 S.E.2d 319. Accordingly, the trial court did not err by denying Gibbins' motion for a 7. Finally, Gibbins contends the trial court err......
  • State v. Boone
    • United States
    • Utah Court of Appeals
    • October 18, 1991
    ...and "impassioned statements" demonstrating hostility for defendant "necessarily engendered sympathy for her plight"); Glenn v. State, 205 Ga. 32, 52 S.E.2d 319, 321 (1949) (widow instructed by prosecutor to "let the jury know she was interested," and who did so by weeping, prejudiced trial)......
  • Shy v. State
    • United States
    • Georgia Supreme Court
    • September 2, 1975
    ...disregard prejudicial remarks by a person in the courtroom after the defense asks for a mistrial it is reversible error. Glenn v. State, 205 Ga. 32, 52 S.E.2d 319 (1949). However, the trial judge has discretion whether to grant the mistrial in order to preserve the defendant's right to a fa......
  • Burns v. State
    • United States
    • Supreme Court of Delaware
    • April 20, 2009
    ...the case in their own way without significant interference so long as they engage in no calculated impropriety."); Glenn v. State, 205 Ga. 32, 52 S.E.2d 319, 321-22 (1949) (granting a new trial due to the victim's widow openly weeping while in the presence of the jury, and the trial court n......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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