55 Ga. App. 376 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
The defendant was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the commission of an unlawful act. His' motion for new trial was overruled, and he excepted. The evidence, considered in its most favorable light to the State, was to the effect that the defendant was driving north from Lawrenceville in the direction of Winder, on the wrong side of the road, at night, with
The judge, after having charged that certain acts would be a violation of the statutory law of Georgia, which he denominated as “the law of the road,” charged the jury as follows: “Now, applying that law of the road to the case now on trial, if you should believe beyond a reasonable doubt from the testimony of the witnesses and the statement of the defendant that the death of Owen
“A crime or misdemeanor shall consist in a violation of a public law, in the commission of which there shall be a union or joint operation of act and intention, or criminal negligence.” Code, § 26-201. The degrees of negligence are as follows: 1st. “ Slight negligence. — In general, extraordinary diligence is that extreme care and caution which every prudent and thoughtful person exercises under the same or similar circumstances. . . The absence of such diligence is termed slight negligence.” § 105-202. 2d. “Ordinary negligence. — In general, ordinary diligence is that degree of care which is exercised by ordinarily prudent persons under the the same or similar circumstances. . . The absence of such diligence is termed ordinary negligence.” § 105-201. 3d. “Gross negligence. — In general, slight diligence is that degree of care which every man of common sense, howsoever inattentive he may be, exercises under the same or similar circumstances. . . The absence of such care is termed gross negligence.” § 105-203. 4th. Wilful and wanton negligence. In’ the case of the first two of these degrees of negligence, contributory negligence, when properly pleaded and established, defeats a recovery in the law of torts. In the third degree of negligence, where a guest is injured, the rule is that contributory negligence, as such, does not defeat a recovery in a civil action, and in the fourth, contributory negligence, as such, does not defeat a recovery in the law of torts. The degree of negligence to be shown on indictment for manslaughter, where an unintentional killing
“The difficulty of attaining perfection in defining 'culpable negligence’ is apparent, but it is agreed that the words necessarily imply something more than a lack of precaution or the exercise of ordinary care. An instruction to the jury merely in the words of the latter proposition is not sufficient; it should explain wherein the distinction consists. Ordinary negligence is based on the theory that a person charged with negligent conduct should have known the probable consequences of his act; culpable negligence rests on the assumption that he knew the probable consequences but was intentionally, recklessly [which must at least be gross negligence], or wantonly indifferent to the results. With respect to the breach of a statute enacted in the interest of public safety,
Contributory negligence, as such, has no place in a case of involuntary manslaughter. Contributory negligence on the part of the deceased implies that the negligence of the defendant was one of the causes of the death (as distinguished from a self-inflicted wound); but if the act of the deceased which caused his death happened to be a negligent one, and was the sole proximate cause of the injury or death (as in the case of a self-inflicted wound or injury), and thus the deceased met his death wholly as a result of his own misfortune and not because of the defendant’s culpable or criminal negligence, the defendant would not be guilty. State v. Eldridge, 197 N. C. 626 (150 S. E. 125). The familiar rule that contributory negligence of the person injured or killed by the negligence of the defendant in the operation of an automobile, if greater than the negligence of the defendant, bars a recovery in a civil action in a proper ease laid and proved, has no application to a prosecution for homicide due to criminal negligence in operating such automobile. In such case the decedent’s behavior may have a material bearing on the question of the -defendant’s guilt; but if the criminal negligence of the latter is found to be the cause of the death, he is criminally responsible whether the decedent’s failure to use due care contributed to the injury or not. The case is one of the State against the defendant, and not one of a party seeking damages against the defendant. In some criminal cases the conduct of the decedent, whether negligent or not, is material to the extent that it bears upon the question whether under all the circumstances of the case the defendant was negligent, or, if negligent, whether the decedent’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of the injury, or whether the injury or death resulted from an unavoidable accident. 5 Am. Jur. 930; § 796; Carbo v. State, 4 Ga. App. 583 (62 S. E. 140). It is desirable, as far as possi
The indictment on which was returned “no bill” against the driver of the second car that hit the disabled truck of the defendant, knocking it over on the deceased and killing him, was improperly admitted in evidence against the defendant. The proceedings in determining whether or not an indictment is returned a “true” or “no” bill are usually conducted in this State in the absence of the defendant, without the aid of counsel, and often in the absence of the most material witnesses both for the prosecution and the defense. To admit the indictment thus arrived at, to be used as evidence on the trial, to influence, perhaps control, the verdict of the jury, would, in our opinion, be inevitably prejudicial. See, in this connection, Royal Arcanum v. Quarles, 23 Ga. App. 104 (97 S. E. 557); Central R. Co. v. Moore, 61 Ga. 151 (2); Whitehurst v. Com., 79 Va. 557; Ætna Life Insurance Co. v. Milward, 118 Ky. 716, 725 (82 S. W. 364, 68 L. R. A. 285, 4 Ann. Cas. 1092).
Headnote 8 needs no elaboration.
Judgment reversed.