90 Ga. 701 | Ga. | 1893
Crawford was found guilty of murder; his motion for a new trial was overruled, and he excepted. It appeared from the evidence that while the defendant was driving his wagon along the highway, the deceased drove up behind in a buggy, whipping his horse and holloaing, and "upon being asked by another person present whether he was drunk, and what was the matter with him, answered, “No, by G-d, I am not drunk; Warren [the defendant] treated me wrong in town.” The defendant and. the deceased quarreled for awhile, but finally desisted; and when they got to a certain point in the road, where the deceased stopped, one of the party proposed to the defendant that they should
1, 3. The theory of the defence was that the killing was justifiable, because done to prevent a robbery; and that if the deceased was not attempting a robbery, his trespass upon the defendant was such that the homicide, if not justifiable, was not murder but merely manslaughter. In defence of his property “ against one who manifestly intends, by violence or surprise, to commit a felony” thereon, a person may kill the aggressor, if he does so under a reasonable belief that the killing is necessary for that purpose. (Code, §4330 ; 1 East P. C. 271; 1 Bish. Crim. L., 8 ed. 853, 875.) To constitute robbery, there must be force or intimidation, asportation without the consent of the owner, and an intent to steal. It is unnecessary that the taking shall be directly from the person of the owner; it is sufficient if it is done in his presence, against his will, by violence or putting him in fear. (Clements v. State, 84 Ga. 660, same case, 20 Am. St. Rep. 385; 2 Bish. Crim. L., 8 ed. §1178.) It was contended on the part of the State that in this case the trespass could not have amounted to a robbery, because the taking was under a claim of right, with the purpose of applying the property taken to the payment of a debt from the defendant to the deceased. It is true such a taking, although wrongful and violent, would not be robbery if the claim of right was in good faith, and if the taking was for no other purpose than
In chai’ging upon the right to kill in defending against a robbery, the court instructed the jury that this right would not exist after the possession of the property had passed from the owner to the person taking. This instruction, under the evidence in this case, was improper; because no such change of possession' as had taken place would cut off the right of the defendant to protect his property against a felonious taking, the property being still in his immediate presence, and the deceased being then engaged in severing that part of the meat which he had said it was his intention to take, and in resisting with his knife the efforts of the defendant to prevent him from carrying out this intention. The taking was not a past, but a present and progressing injury; and if the defendant acted under a reasonable
If, however, the evidence does not sustain this theory, we think it tends rather to make out a case of manslaughter than of murder; though we do not go to the length of upholding the position taken by counsel for the accused, that a homicide to prevent a mere trespass not amounting to a felony, is manslaughter only. That view finds no sanction in any adjudication of this court,
In the present case we think the circumstances conform to this test. We think they may properly be classed among those circumstances which justify the excitement of passion and exclude the idea of delibera
4. It is complained that the court erred in charging that section 4832 of the code, which declares that “ if after persuasion, remonstrance or other gentle means used, a forcible attack and invasion on the property or habitation of another cannot be prevented, it shall be justifiable homicide to kill the person so forcibly attacking and invading,” etc., does not apply to the defence of property which is not at the habitation. It is questionable whether this construction is correct, although it is in accord with the view expressed by Lochrane, C. J., in the Pound case, 43 Ga. 89. What was there said on this subject, however, was unnecessary to the adjudication in that case, and is to be taken as dictum merely. But whether this construction is correct or not, the section quoted does not apply to every attack or invasion on property. The concluding part of the section says, it must appear “ that a serious injury was intended, or might accrue, to the person, property or family of the person killing.” It has no application where the property attacked or invaded is so inconsiderable that the injury intended is not serious but slight, such as severing from a side of meat a small part of it,— certainly not where the injury is not proceeding to a
Judgment reversed.