The defendant was convicted of murder on circumstantial evidence and sentenced, under the verdict of the jury,
1. It being in proof that the commissioners for the selection of traverse jurors, as intelligent and upright citizens, acted honestly and according to law, and their integrity being conceded by defendant, the challenge to the array, based apparently upon the fact that but few colored men were selected and some, colored and white, were omitted who in the judgment of witnesses should have been on the list, was properly overruled. It is the judgment of the commissioners which, under the constitution and laws of this state,'controls in the selection of grand and petit jurors, and not the opinion of witnesses sworn on the trial of a cause.
2. The solicitor-general, as the organ of the court and under its direction, “ time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary,” has sworn the witnesses for the. state and for the defense ; and there has hardly ever .been a legal conviction in Georgia, if that officer, by order of the judge in open court, had not the legal power to administer oaths to those witnesses. It is the common law of this state, sanctioned by a practice ever since its independence, and to rule it not to be law would be to open the doors of the penitentiary and to convict her judges and sheriffs of murder in many cases. There was no error, .therefore, in overruling the objection to that officer’s administering the oath provided by law to the witnesses in the case on trial.
3. The sayings of the murdered woman on the night of the homicide when in the act of leaving the house to which she never returned, and a short time before the homicide, that “ there are two persons down the alley; I think it is .Harp and his sweetheart; I will go down and see,” were admissible as part of the res gestee, which is the transaction which began in her leaving the house in search of the prisoner and culminated in her assassination where she ex
4. A stick left at a house the night of the homicide, and shortly after the deceased left her house to follow defendant as she said, had the appearance of blood upon it. The witness stated that “ it looked like blood to him this was objected to and admitted. It was competent for the witness to say that the stain had that look to him. The fact that he handled the stick and examined it when the mark'was fresh, was enough to allow his opinion' to go to the jury. The appearance óf a'thing is a fact, particularly such a thing as blood stain. Most people are familiar with it, and may state how'it looked to them when fresh. So the appearance of a pistol was'held admissible
5. Objection was made to the admission of the stick for examination by the jury. The same case, 56 Ga., 113, ruled the pistol admissible, and that ruling covers the point here, and'cases might be multiplied to the same point. Bloody clothing, bloody knives, are always held to be admissible ; why not a bloody stick used that night by the defendant and left at the house where he spent the night ?
6. The dead body with the knife thrust across the neck and breast, enough to cause death, are proofs sufficient to show the corpus delicti. The body in death and the criminal agency in causing it are the two elements that make the corpus delicti. The body found and identified, the throat cut, the fact that there was no sign of suicide or accident, are ample to prove the corpus delicti.
7. The issue was, who did the act that made the homicide ? The jury found that the defendant did it. Is there legal evidence to sustain, the finding? That is the solé remaining ground, though subdivided into several specifications. It is conceded that the charge is unexceptionable. It is unexcepted to.
The evidence is all circumstantial, yet it points steadily to the prisoner as the criminal actor in the deed of blood. The finger posts direct the searcher for truth nowhere else. There is no motive for another to perpetrate the deed. He was tired of her, and she followed in jealousy his attentions to another woman. This had made him angry to the extent of severely beating her before more than once, and he had threatened to kill her. With the woman of whom she was jealous, he passed down the alley, and she followed. The woman left and defendant and deceased talked angrily together, and there or near there her body was found the next day. That silent but never perjured witness, his stick, with its finger prints of blood, was left at the house where he spent the night. There
Judgment affirmed.