Summary
Judgment vacated with direction. Deen, P. J., and Smith, J., concur.
Summary
Judgment vacated with direction. Deen, P. J., and Smith, J., concur.
Text
Stephen H. Harris, for appellant.
The defendant and another person, Willie Lee Mitchell, were jointly indicted on two counts of aggravated assault and one count of robbery by force. Mitchell was tried separately and was convicted of robbery by force and one count of simple battery. The defendant's trial, held approximately a year later, resulted in convictions on all three indictments as charged.
Immediately upon the call of the case for trial, defense counsel moved for a continuance for additional time to obtain a transcript of co-defendant Mitchell's trial. This motion was denied. Following the trial, defense counsel filed a motion for "judgment notwithstanding the verdict," which was dismissed on motion by the state as being a civil rather than a criminal remedy. This appeal is from that order of dismissal.
1. "No matter by what name a pleading is called, the nature of the action is determined by the substance. [Cits.]" Deen v. State,
2. The evidence in this case is ample to support the verdict. Both of the victims testified that the defendant was one of two persons who burst into their home, beat them, and took money from them.
3. The defendant asserts that his conviction on one of the aggravated assault indictments arose out of the same conduct as did his robbery conviction and that this aggravated assault conviction should have merged into the robbery conviction as a lesser included offense. We do not agree. The robbery victim testified that during the 30 minutes that the defendant was present in his home, the defendant strangled him, hit him on the head with a coffee table leg, and jumped up and down on his back and ribs. The jury was authorized to conclude that at least a portion of this violence was gratuitous and unconnected with the theft of the victim's money. Accordingly, we cannot accept the contention either that the one offense was included in the other or that both offenses were established by the same conduct. See Code 26-505, 26-506; Roberts v. State,
There is no testimony from the court reporter to indicate whether the absence of the transcript was due to the defendant's failure to pay for it or for some other reason. We accordingly remand the case for a new hearing on the motion for continuance in order to determine why the transcript was not available to the defense. If the evidence at the hearing indicates that defense counsel was denied the transcript despite his due diligence in attempting to obtain it, then the judgment of conviction must be reversed for a new trial. Otherwise, the conviction is affirmed.
Andrew J. Ryan, III, District Attorney, Stephen R. Yekel, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
1978
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This document cites
- Supreme Court of Georgia - LEDFORD v. THE STATE (two cases)., 237 Ga. 628, 229 S.E.2.d 403
- Supreme Court of Georgia - HARVEY v. THE STATE., 233 Ga. 41, 209 S.E.2.d 587
- Supreme Court of Georgia - ROWE v. THE STATE., 232 Ga. 700, 208 S.E.2.d 500
- Supreme Court of Georgia - ROBERTS v. THE STATE., 228 Ga. 298, 185 S.E.2.d 385 (1971)
- Supreme Court of Georgia - DEEN v. THE STATE., 216 Ga. 387, 116 S.E.2.d 595 (1960)
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