122 Ga. 161 | Ga. | 1905
“A prima facie case is all that is necessary to carry dying declarations to the jury. It is an issue of fact whether or not they were made in the immediate prospect of death.” . Varnedoe v. State, 75 Ga. 181. It is not necessary that the person whose statements are sought to be introduced should express himself as believing that he is in a dying condition. Consciousness of his condition may be inferred from the nature of his wound, or from other circumstances. Young v. State, 114 Ga. 849. In the present case, if the jury were authorized to find that at the time the alleged declarations were made the deceased was conscious at all, there was no difficulty in finding that he was conscious of hie condition; for, leaving out of consideration the fact that he was informed by the physician that he would not recover, the horrible nature of his wounds was enough to put any conscious man on notice that they were almost necessarily fatal. The evidence as to whether or not he was conscious and realized what he was saying might have been stronger; but the evidence of the physician who attended him, and of a witness who was with him for some time after he was wounded, was certainly sufficient to make out