16 Ga. App. 539 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
It is unnecessary to discuss all the exceptions covered by the foregoing headnotes. We deem it proper, however, to enlarge slightly on two of the headnotes.
The third and fourth grounds allege that the court erred in admitting certain testimony, and set out why, in the opinion of movant, the admission of the testimony was erroneous, but, as said in reference to the first and second grounds, it is not stated that these objections were urged at the time when the evidence was offered. The various authorities cited in the first headnote cover the point here discussed.
2. To what is said in the second headnote as to the propriety of the charge of the court on the subject of manslaughter it is not necessary to add anything further than a part of the statement made by the accused at his trial, which was as follows: “He [the deceased] had started to his room, and he said ‘I am going to my room.’ At that time there was an ordinance here in town against
The statement of the defendant, when taken in connection with the evidence of several witnesses to the effect that the defendant confessed to them after the killing that he had intentionally shot the deceased while attempting to arrest him as town marshal for some minor municipal offense, certainly authorized the submission to the jury of the law of manslaughter, since the evidence further showed that there was no marked disparity in size, if any disparity, between the deceased and his slayer, and it was nowhere suggested in any of the proved statements of the accused, or in his statement at the trial, that the killing was necessary in order to save his life, or even that he was acting under the fears of a reasonable man that his life was in danger, but from his own statements it appears that the deceased made or attempted to make an assault upon him immediately before the fatal shot was fired, amounting to less than a felony, which, while not justifying the homicide, may yet have been sufficient to arouse in the mind of the accused an irresistible passion of anger which brought about the fatal shot, without any admixture of deliberation whatsoever. It- appears to us that the jury took the most lenient view possible under the evidence submitted to them, and gave to the defendant the benefit of every legal defense which might be extracted from the record as a whole; for, regardless of what may have been the imagined rights and powers which the defendant supposed he was clothed with by reason of the fact that he was marshal of the town, it seems that the homicide was wanton and unjustifiable. It has been said that “a little learning is a dangerous thing;” and it may be said with equal if not greater truth that a little “authority” is often a far more dangerous tiring than a little learning. It would, be well if town marshals, constables, policemen, and other petty officers could learn otherwise than by sad experience that even those who wear a badge
“Drest in a little'brief authority,
Most ignorant of what he’s most assur’d,
Plays such fantastic tricks before high Heaven As make the angels weep.”
Judgment affirmed.