119 Ga. 805 | Ga. | 1904
An accusation was preferred against Anderson Culberson, in the city court of Hamilton, charging that on July 19, 1903, in Harris county, he carried “about his person a pistol to a place of public worship, the same being Jehovah Colored Baptist Church, Whitesville, Ga., where a congregation was then assembled for the purpose of public worship.” Upon the trial the evidence for the State was to the effect, that on the day named a congregation was assembled at such church for public worship; that there was a public spring about two hundred yards from the church, but not on the church-ground, where it was customary for the congregations which assembled at this church to get water, there being no other source of water supply; that during the noon recess, when many of the congregation were going to and fro between the church and the spring, the accused was seen with a pistol in his hand, going from the direction of the spring towards the church, and that he so carried it to within fifteen or twenty steps of the church; that when asked, at the time, by several of the witnesses what he was doing with the pistol, he'replied that he had taken it from a man by the name of Hodo at the spring, and at the request of one of the witnesses he immediately turned it over to him. The accused introduced no testimony, but made a statement in which he said that he took the pistol from Hodo at the spring, because Hodo seemed to want to shoot some one with it, and that he, the accused, carried it in his 'hand towards the church till Hood, one of the State’s witnesses, asked him for it, when he delivered it to him. The jury found the accused guilty. He moved for a new trial upon both general and special grounds. His motion was overruled, and he excepted. The Penal Code, § 342, makes it a misdemeanor for any one, except certain designated officers of the law, to carry about his person a pistol, or any kind of deadly weapon, to any place of public worship, or any other public gathering, in this State, except militia muster grounds. The declaration of the accused, to the effect that he took the pistol
In Minter v. State, 104 Ga. 743, it was held : “ A charge in an indictment, that the accused disturbed a congregation of persons lawfully assembled for divine service ‘at’ a named church; is sustained by proof that he disturbed a congregation so assembled for such purpose at a bush-arbor near such church; both places being within the jurisdiction of the court.” There it appeared that the bush-arbor was one hundred and seventy-five or two hundred yards from the church. So, in McCright v. State, 110 Ga. 261,it was held: ‘‘An indictment which charged the accused with disturbing an assemblage of a public school at a named schoolhouse was supported by evidence showing that though the assemblage of the school which was disturbed was not in the school building it was at a bush-arbor near thereto.” The record in that case shows that the arbor was from seventy-five to one hundred yards from the schoolhouse. According to the rulings made in these last two cases, we think that the spring which was so near the church, and from which the congregations which there assembled were in the habit of procuring water, should be held, in contemplation of the statute alleged to have been violated, to be at the place of public worship. Although the
Judgment reversed.