6 Ga. App. 741 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Alec Clark was charged with the offense of murder, and was convicted of voluntary manslaughter. Iiis sole exception is that the judge erred in giving in charge to the jury the law of voluntary manslaughter, because if he was guilty of any offense he was guilty of murder; and that the verdict of the'jury finding Mm guilty of voluntary manslaughter is without any evidence to support it. The jury were authorized to infer, from the evidence, that the defendant and the deceased, who lived on the same plantation, went one night to a house in the neighborhood, where a crowd had assembled, and, while there, suddenly got into a quarrel about some money which one owed the other. They became thoroughly angry, and the defendant cursed the deceased and demanded immediate settlement of the debt. The deceased then grabbed the defendant, pulled out his knife, and laid it on the defendant’s neck, and said, “If you get a pistol to shoot me, I will cut your throat.” The defendant thereupon said that he did not have any pistol, and told the deceased that he would not hurt him. About that time some bystanders interfered, and begged the deceased not to hurt the defendant, as he was unarmed. The deceased then turned the defendant loose, and the defendant backed off seven or eight feet, pulled his pistol, and said, “Yes, I have got it, and I will kill you,” and thereupon immediately fired and killed the deceased. At the time of the shot the deceased was standing in the same spot he was in when he laid his knife on the defendant’s neck and threatened to cut his throat, and still had his open knife in his hand, and, other than the act of turning the defendant loose, had not done or said anything that indicated that he had abandoned the fight. The deceased was a stronger man than the defendant, and had turned him loose only when bystanders interceded. The defendant introduced no evidence, but his statement made out a ease of self-defense.
It is sometimes very difficult to tell when voluntary manslaughter is involved in a case, and when the law relating to that offense should be given in charge to the jury. The State’s evidence in this case would have authorized a verdict of guilty of murder; and if the judge had charged the law of murder onfy, the defendant would probably have excepted on the ground that the judge should have