88 Ga. 347 | Ga. | 1892
Stephen Custer and Rufus Collins were indicted for murder. There were two counts in the indictment. The first count charged them both as principals; the second charged Custer as principal and Collins as accessory before the fact. They severed on the trial, and Collins was tried first and convicted on the first count. He made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled.
This evidence, if it be true, makes Collins at least a principal in the second degree, if not an “ actor, or absolute perpetrator of the crime.” He was not actually present in the house where the crime was perpetrated, but he was constructively present — sufficiently near to encourage by his presence the principal actor, and to assist him if assistance should become necessary. Confederacy with the absolute perpetrator of the crime, supplemented by constructive presence, makes one a principal in the second degree. 1 Whart. Crim. Law, §§213, 218, 219; Kerr, Homicide, 110; 1 Bish. Crim. Law, §653; 2 Roscoe, Crim. Ev. p. *752; Desty, Amer. Crim. Law, §37a.
(a) Having shown that Collins was a principal, it is immaterial whether he was a principal in the first or second degree. There is.no difference in this State between the punishment of a principal in the first degree and that of a pi’incipal in the second degree; and where this is true, it seems now to be well 'settled that there is no practical or material difference between principals of the two degrees, and a principal in the second degree may be convicted on an indictment charging him as principal in the first degree ; in other words, an indictment charging one as principal in the first degree is supported by evidence showing him to be a principal in the second degree. This is especially true if the facts, as in this case, be such as that the act by which the crime is perpetrated would, on established principles of