Emma Daniels, alias Emma Danielly, was indicted for the murder of Annie Pearson. She was tried and convicted, with a recommendation. She moved for a new trial upon the formal grounds, and by an amendment to her motion added seven special grounds. The trial judge overruled the motion, and to this judgment she excepted.
1. The trial judge charged the jury as follows: “A reasonable doubt is a doubt that is reasonable, growing out of a consideration of the evidence. The jury tries the case by the evidence. If the evidence fails to produce in the minds of the jury reasonable and moral certainty, or fails to remove all reasonable doubt of guilt of the defendant, then the evidence is insufficient to authorize a verdict of guilty.” The defendant excepts and assigns error on this charge, upon the ground that it instructed the jury that a reasonable doubt must grow out of the evidence, thus excluding from their consideration her statement to them in determining whether there was a reasonable doubt of her guilt. Held, that the judge can properly frame his general charge to the jury upon the evidence alone, appropriately instructing them, however, at some stage thereof, with respect to the defendant’s statement. Tolbirt v. State, 124 Ga. 767 (2) (
2. The court charged the jury as follows: “Now in this case, if this defendant made up her mind with any degree of deliberation to kill Annie Pearson, and did kill her, using for that purpose a weapon likely to produce death, when there was no considerable provocation being then given to her by Annie Pearson, or if she made up her mind to kill Annie Pearson on account of some past injury or wrong that Annie Pearson had committed to the defendant, or the defendant may have thought she committed upon her, any wrong she had done her in the past, and killed her in this manner for the purpose of avenging a wrong, a real or fancied wrong, Annie Pearson had done her, then she is guilty
(а) The contention that this instruction expressed an opinion by the court to the jury that the defendant killed the deceased, and used for that purpose a weapon likely to produce death, is without merit. This instruction left the jury to determine whether the defendant killed the deceased, and whether in doing so she used a weapon likely to produce death. Such hypothetical statement of the facts to be determined by the jury did not amount to an expression of opinion upon the facts by the court. Kitchens v. State, 41 Ga. 217. In Davis v. State, 91 Ga. 167 (
(б) To kill with any degree of deliberation, when no considerable provocation is given to the slayer by the deceased at the time, not for the purpose of preventing any impending wrong, but for the purpose of avenging a past wrong, is murder. Hill v. State, 64 Ga. 453 (2) ; Mays v. State, 88 Ga. 399 (
(c) The court did not err in restricting the provocation to the time of the slaying, as the court in its instruction was then dealing with provocation which would justify a homicide, and not such provocation as would reduce the homicide from murder to manslaughter.
(d) In this instruction the court did not withdraw from the jury the right to reduce the homicide from murder to manslaughter, but was enumerating to the jury certain circumstances under which the homicide would be murder, the judge afterwards submitting to the jury the question whether the homicide amounted to manslaughter.
3. The court charged the jury as follows: “But I charge you that an essential element of justifiable homicide, that is if the killing is done for the purpose of preventing an impending wrong, a man can not kill another in self-defense unless'there is at the time a necessity to kill, or an apparent necessity to kill in order for the killer to save'his own life or to protect himself from a felonious assault being made or about to be made upon him. A man can not be justified and guilty of no crime
(а) The first exception to this charge is without merit. The court expressly instructed the jury that an apparent necessity to kill would be sufficient, and did not restrict them to a real necessity.
(б) This instruction did not put upon the defendant the burden of showing a real necessity to kill, and did not exclude from the jury the doctrine of reasonable fears. In Dotson v. State, 129 Ga. 727 (
(o) The use of the word “justify,” in this instruction, instead of the word “excite,” is not exact. Morgan v. State, 152 Ga. 537 (
4. The court charged the jury as follows: “There is another grade of homicide that is not so serious a grade as murder, known as voluntary manslaughter, where one intentionally kills another, not as a result of a deliberate intention to kill, but as the result of some considerable provocation given at the time, a provocation that has the effect of arousing a degree of passion in a man’s mind that is supposed to be irresistible, as where one man commits a serious personal injury on another, and, in the opinion of the jury trying the ease, justifies the excitement of passion supposed to be irresistible.” The defendant excepts to this charge, on the ground that it limited to the time of the killing provocation that might reduce the killing from murder to man
(a) The killing of one who is in the act of adultery with the slayer’s wife is within Penal Code section 75, which declares that “All other instances which stand upon the same footing of reason and justice as those enumerated shall be justifiable homicide.” Richardson v. State, 70 Ga. 825. While the jury may acquit the slayer of all crime, and should do so if they find that the killing was necessary, or apparently so, either to prevent the commission of a sexual act or the completion of it, yet, if the circumstances were not such as to impress a rational mind that it was necessary to take human life to prevent the sexual intercourse, and if the jury should find that the slayer killed the deceased under a violent and sudden impulse of passion, engendered by the circumstances, the homicide would be manslaughter. Mays v. State, 88 Ga. 399 (
(5) If a husband was keeping the wife of another man, of which the wife had knowledge, if the wife and mistress of the husband, some two months prior to the killing of the mistress by the wife, had a fight growing out of the illicit relations between the husband and his mistress, at which time the mistress admitted to the wife her illicit rela
(c) It follows that the court erred in instructing the jury that the provocation which would reduce the homicide from murder to manslaughter must be given at the time of the homicide, and that the provocation which would so reduce the homicide must be a circumstance occurring at the time of the killing. The jury should have been permitted to consider all the facts and circumstances in determining whether the defendant acted under a sudden and irresistible heat of passion, or whether she acted with deliberation and malice. Nixon v. State, 14 Ga. App. 261 (
5. In the motion for new trial the defendant alleges that the court erred in failing to give in charge to the jury the law of involuntary manslaughter in the commission of an unlawful act. This contention is based upon two theories. One is that the defendant in her statement to the jury claimed that she did not mean, and intend to kill the deceased. The other theory is that the mortal wound was inflicted with a knife, which was not shown to be a deadly weapon. The first theory rests entirely upon the statement of the defendant, and the court is not required to give an instruction based thereon in the absence of a timely written request. Austin v. State, 160 Ga. 509 (
6. The court charged the jury as follows: “Where one makes up his mind with any degree of deliberation to kill another, that is a killing with deliberate malice, or express malice, which means an unlawful killing with deliberate intention.” On this charge the defendant assigns error upon the ground that one may make up his mind in the heat of passion to kill another, and the killing would be no more than voluntary manslaughter. There is no merit in this exception. The instruction complained of dealt with an unlawful homicide committed with deliberation.
7. We grant a new trial in this case on account of the error in the instructions to the jury dealt with in the fourth headnote.
Judgment reversed.
