140 Ga. 225 | Ga. | 1913
The plaintiff in error was convicted of the murder of L. D. Thornton, and recommended to the mercy of the court. According to the testimony submitted by the prosecution, the accused had a farm on the plantation of the decedent. The decedent went to the house of the accused and asked him why he was not hoeing his cotton. The accused replied that he was sick. Both engaged in a. colloquy, and the accused got his shotgun. ' The decedent, who was unarmed, ran around the house, entreating the accused not to shoot him. The accused shot him twice as he was endeavoring to escape. The wound was inflicted upon the right side of the body, in the upper part of the lumbar region. The gunshot made a hole as large as a man’s fist, and broke several ribs. The decedent survived about six hours after receiving his injuries. Shortly before his death, after stating that he knew he was going to die, he declared that the accused shot him. The defendant offered a witness who testified, that after the decedent and the accused engaged in a wordy altercation, each cursing the
1. There was no error in admitting the dying declaration of the decedent as to the cause of his death and who shot him, as it was made by the declarant in articulo mortis and while conscious of his condition. Penal Code, § 1026.
2. “While the testimony of a witness whose evidence goes to the jury through the medium of dying declarations is to be considered under the same rules that govern them in determining the credibility of other, witnesses who testify from the stand, the failure of the judge to charge upon the subject of such rules will not be a sufficient reason for granting a new trial, in the absence of an appropriate and timely written request asking instructions upon the subject.” Hall v. State, 124 Ga. 649 (2), 650 (52 S. E. 891).
3. The jury were instructed: “Under the definition of malice as defined by the law, it does not necessarily imply any previous ill will on the part of the person killing against the person killed; but where a homicide is shown to have been committed, and all the circumstances connected with such homicide show a deliberate intention unlawfully to take human life, without mitigation, or without excuse, or without justification, under circumstances of that kind malice as defined by the law would exist.” There was evidence of an unlawful killing, and this instruction was not erroneous because the defendant in his statement admitted and justified the killing. Mann v. State, 124 Ga. 760 (53 S. E. 324, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 934).
4. The court’s instructions as complained of in the third and sixth grounds of the amended motion, when considered in connection with that part of the charge from which the excerpts were taken, were not open to the criticism that they narrowed the law
5. The court charged that a witness may be impeached by disproving the facts testified to by him, and by previous contradictory statements made by him of matters relevant to his testimony and to the case. It is contended that the court also should have instructed the jury that a witness was impeachable as to his general bad character. There was no attempt to impeach any witness by proof of general bad character, and the court properly gave no instruction as to this mode of impeachment.
6-8. The summary of facts, though brief, is comprehensive of the case made by the prosecution and the defense. There was no attack upon the habitation of the accused, and the court properly refrained from giving in charge Penal Code, § 72. According to the evidence submitted by the prosecution the accused was guilty of murder. If the witness offered .by the accused was credible, he was justifiable in taking the life of the decedent. There was no middle ground. The verdict is supported by the evidence, and no reason appears for interfering with the discretion of the court in refusing a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.