136 Ga. 340 | Ga. | 1911
1. The State introduced testimony that the defendant stated before the coroner’s inquest that he undertook to -take a gun from the deceased, and that “in tussling over the gun the gun went off.” Eeld, that the refusal of the court to permit the defendant to prove by the ' witness delivering such testimony that, in the statement about which he was testifying, the defendant also stated that the shooting of the deceased was an accident, was not error requiring a new trial, in view of the fact that the court subsequently reversed such ruling and permitted the defendant to make such proof by the witness.
(a) When the defendant was allowed to prove by the witness that, in the statement referred to in the preceding note, the defendant also stated that the discharge of the gun was an accident, it was error for the court to rule: “I don’t allow these words about it being an accident to go in to show it as a fact; to show it was an accident, but as a disclaimer of guilt. The court allows it to go in only to that extent.”
3. Whether or not it would require the grant of a new trial that, in the trial of one indicted for murder, the 'judge charged the jury that “the law presumes every homicide to be felonious, until the contrary appears from circumstances of alleviation, or excuse or justification, and it is incumbent upon the prisoner to make out by a preponderance of the evidence, if a homicide is shown to have been committed by him, such circumstances to the satisfaction of the jury, unless they arise out of the evidence produced against him,” this coirrt does not commend the use of the expression that it is incumbent upon the accused to make out his defense by a preponderance of the evidence; and especially is this true where the defense was that the homicide was accidental rather than intentional.
(a) If a homicide is proved, and the evidence adduced to establish it shows neither mitigation nor justification, malice will be presumed from the proof of the homicide; but the presumption is rebuttable, and may be overcome by evidence of alleviation or justification. If the evidence adduced to establish the homicide presents two conflicting theories, one of malice and the other of absence of malice, it becomes a question of fact to be decided by the jury as to which aspect of the evidence is the real truth of the occurrence. Where the only evidence adduced by the State to show that the accused committed the homicide consists of proof of a dying declaration by the deceased that he killed her, and proof of a statement made by him in which he stated that he killed her but that it was an accident, the charge set out in the preceding headnote (except in regard to the point therein dealt with as to the charge in regard to the preponderance of evidence) can not be .held to be error requiring a new trial; but on a new trial, the distinction between the different rules of law applicable where the proof of the homicide rests upon a statement of the accused proved by the State which includes in itself exculpation, and where the homicide is proved by evidence which does not also include exculpation or mitigation, should be more clearly made. Futch v. State, 90 Ga. 472 (8), 480, 481 (16 S. E. 102); Mann v. State, 124 Ga. 760, 762 (53 S. E. 324, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 934).
4. Except as pointed out in the preceding notes, no error requiring a new trial appears in any of the grounds of the motion for a new trial, or of the amendment thereto.
Judgment reversed.