171 Ga. 335 | Ga. | 1930
The grand jury of Bibb County indicted Will Daniel and Jesse Brazelle for the murder of Garfield Brown by shooting him with a pistol. Will Daniel was put upon trial, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty, without recommendation; and he was sentenced to be electrocuted. His motion for new trial was overruled, and he excepted.
The evidence for the State tended to show that the movant and 'three companions, between 10 and 11 o’clock a. m., drove an automobile from a place where movant and Garfield Brown had been gambling, to a point in East Macon, and stopped the car almost opposite No. 405 Mitchell Street. Anna Bell Jones, a witness for the State, testified: “I live at 405 Mitchell Street. I was at home on the first Sunday in November last year, when some one was shot close to my house. ' It was between 10 and 11 o’clock Sunday morning. I was sitting on my porch. The man that got shot was a door above my house in an automobile. They drove up there in a car and stopped, and when they stopped and sat there a while I heard one say, ‘I will kill the G— d— s— of a b — and I looked up the street and saw a man get up like he was going to jump on him and beat him, and about that time the pistol fired, and another man says, ‘Don’t shoot him again; he will die at that.’ I don’t know who said anjdhing about shooting him any more, but the man says, ‘I will shoot him again,’ and the other man says, ‘Don’t shoot him any more; he will die at that,’ and when he said that they all got Out of the car, and I could still see somebody sitting in the car behind after the three men got out of the car, and the tall man took the pistol and the other two started off, and he held up the - pistol and the other two men came around the car, and the two jumped up in the car, and they done something to the man in the car, and the man in the car fell over, and the two men got out of the car, and the man with the black pants wiped his hands on the grass, the man with the crutch, and .this defendant had started on by my house trotting along, and-1 says, ‘Who is that you all done killed; aint he got no folks here?’ and he says, ‘Tell them acei
Leola McCoy, for the State, testified: “I live on Mitchell Street. I was at home on my front porch the first Sunday in November when some one was killed. The car stopped almost in front of my door, but kinder to the side of the door between my house and Willa’s. There were four men in the car. I heard the yellow man say, ‘Stop the ear,’ and the defendant says, ‘I will kill the s— of a b — ,’ and he got on his knees like, and it looked like he put one of his feet on the car seat and it looked like he put the pistol right against the man’s breast. The man that got killed was not doing anything; it looked like he was half asleep; and the defendant -put the pistol right against his breast and fired, and then the defendant jumped out of the car and says, ‘Call the officers and tell them it was an accident,’ and he started off down the road, and he came back and went to where the yellow man was and came around next to my house. The defendant had the pistol the last time I saw it. I don’t know what kind of a pistol it was. The defendant was in the road right side of the car with the pistol, the last I saw of the pistol, ahd he went around the car and came back on the side the yellow man was, which was Jesse, and then talked to Jesse. I don’t know what Jesse did then, because I got up and went in the house and came right back, and when I came out of the house the defendant was going on off down the road and saying, ‘Tell them it was an accident,’ as far as I could hear him. He first started off trotting, and when he got down the road he stepped up a little. I went to the car. I didn’t know any of these folks. The car - was probably the distance to the other door there across the hall from me when the shooting accurred, something like 50 or 60 feet. • I could hear what they said all right.' I didn’t hear anybody say, ‘Don’t shoot him again,’ but I heard somebody say, ‘You have done enough to him; don’t do anything' else,’ and about that time the defendant says, ‘I will kill the s— of
John Floyd, for the State, testified: “The first Sunday in November I was at Tony’s house on Mitchell Street, and a car stopped in front of his house with four men in it. Before the car stopped I heard some one curse, saying, ‘G— d— you, I will kill you,’ and then the shooting took place, and the yellow man on the front seat says, ‘There now, you have killed that man for nothing,’ and the man that did the shooting says, ‘It is an accident.’ This woman Leola lives next door to Tony’s. Anna Bell Jones lived below where I was. The car stopped between where I was sitting and the McCoy house. I was on the front porch pf Tony’s house, and was sitting on the lower side of the porch next tp Saul McCoy’s house. After the shooting took place the yellow man had a black looking pistol, and the yellow fellow says to the one that did the shooting, ‘Hand me the pistol,’ but . I don’t know what he did with it. Jesse is crippled. A bright looking man was under the steering-wheel of the ear. I can’t .say whether the defendant is the man that did the shooting or not, as his Jaack was to me and the car was closed. The man that got out of the car with the pistol and said it was an accident went on down the line running.”
B. T. Watkins, for the State, testified: “I am chief of police of Macon. I had occasion to go to Mitchell Street in East Macon, Bibb County, on the first Sunday in November, 1929. I went there after I found there had been some trouble there. The car had been moved when I got there. I saw the body of Garfield Brown at the undertaker’s. He was wounded on the left side of the chest. The bullet looked like it ranged through and came out a little lower on the right side under the arm. I arrested the defendant. He was down near the cemetery that night about 7:30 or 8 o’clock, the same day the shooting happened. Didn’t offer him any inducement or threaten him or offer him any hope of reward to tell me about the shooting. He told me he and Jesse Brazelle and some ■other negroes had been off back of Mitchell Street, gambling, that day, and Garfield was with them, and Garfield came back to the car before they did, and then they came and started down Mitchell
The defendant’s statement was in part as follows: “The first Sunday in November, me and Jesse and Jewl and Garfield Brown, we went off riding, and I had about $20, and he come to my house Sunday morning and says, ‘Lets go and get some whisky,’ and I was buying it; we were not mad; and he says, ‘Lets go on Pleasant Hill,’ and I says, ‘All right,’ and we went and I bought a quart of liquor out there and gave $1.50 for it, and we drank it, and they come along where I live, and I says, ‘Lets get something to eat,’ and he says, ‘Let’s go to Bast Macon,’ and me and Jesse and Garfield and Parham, and we went, and I bought a quart of liquor there, and we drank that, and Big Boy says, ‘Whereabouts was they skinning today,’ and I says, ‘I reckon at the same place where they gambled all the time,’ and we all went down there, and Garfield says, ‘I didn’t get paid off Saturday; lend me a dollar,’ and I says, ‘I haven’t got it here, I have got it at home, I have got 50 cents and I will give you 50 cents; and I loaned him 50 cents and lost a quarter of the 50 cents, and when he done that he says, ‘Give me the other quarter back and I will go to the car,’ and I says, ‘You
The evidence authorized the jury to find the defendant guilty.
In ground one of the amendment to the motion for new trial movant contends that the court erred in charging the jury as follows-: “I charge you that drunkenness shall not be an excuse for any. crime or misdemeanor, unless such drunkenness was caused by fraud or contrivance of another person for the purpose of having, the crime committed. The general proposition is that drunkenness is not an excuse for crime; and if you should believe that this defendant was drunk and while in a drunken condition he intentionally shot and killed Garfield Brown, he would be guilty as though he had been sober.” Movant contends that this charge was error and prejudicial to his rights in that it was not authorized by-the evidence. It is insisted, that, while the testimony for the State was to the effect that other persons with the defendant at the
Ground 2 of the amendment to the motion for new trial assigns error on the failure of the court to give in charge, to the jury section 40 of the Penal Code of 1910, in substance or otherwise. It is insisted that the defendant predicated his defense on the theory of accidental killing. The court charged the jury as follows : “It is contended in this case for the defendant that the killing was an accident. If it was an accident, then he is not guilty of any offense. That is the simple question in the case. Did the defendant intentionally shoot and kill Garfield Brown, or, if he. shot him, was it an accident ? If it was an accident, if the defendant did not intend to kill, then there could be no murder. But if he did intend to shoot the deceased and did shoot him, and there are no circumstances of mitigation, why then the killing would be murder.” In view of the foregoing charge, it was not error in the trial judge to fail to charge section 40 of the Penal Code, “with explanation and elucidation of what accident constitutes and embodies.” That section provides that “A person shall not be found guilty of any crime or misdemeanor committed by misfortune or accident, and where it satisfactorily appears there was no evil design or intention, or culpable neglect.” “Where, on the trial of a defendant charged with the crime of murder, the defense relied on is that the homicide was the result of accident or misfortune, and the court has correctly charged the jury the law in relation thereto, it is not error for the court to omit to define what would constitute accident or misfortune, in the absence of a
Ground 3 of the amendment to the motion for new trial assigns error on the refusal of a request to charge the following (Penal Code, § 67) : “Involuntary manslaughter shall consist in the killing of a human being without any intention to do so, but in the commission of an unlawful act, or a lawful act, which probably might produce such' a consequence, in an unlawful manner; provided, that where such involuntary killing shall happen in the commission of an unlawful act which, in its consequences, naturally tends to destroy the life of a human being, or is committed in the prosecution of a riotous intent, or of a crime punishable by death or confinement in the penitentiary, the offense shall be deemed and adjudged to be murder.” Involuntary manslaughter was not involved in this case; and therefore the court did not err in refusing to give in charge the law on that subject. Golatt v. State, 130 Ga. 18 (2) (60 S. E. 107).
Judgment affirmed.