Charles Felder was tried under an indictment charging him with the offense of murder, in that he had feloniously killed one Will Harris by shooting him with a pistol. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted.
Another witness, Maggie West, testified as follows: “I am Rush West’s wife. I went to a Christmas tree at Lee Adams’s during Christmas; don’t recall any disturbance or fuss there that night. I don’t know exactly what time me and my husband went there that night. When we got to the oak tree after we left the house Hardwick and Will Harris overtaken us. I saw them. I saw Hardwick run up with a pistol and throw it on him, and when I seen that I went to running. I didn’t hear what was said. I don’t know who else came up besides them two- boys, because I run. There wasn’t nobody with me and my husband, because my sister and my brother was running. I didn’t see anythifig after they run, because I was running. I don’t remember hearing any gun shoot, because I was running, and I didn’t hear nothing.”
This is the only testimony in the case upon which the movant can base the contention that the evidence required a charge upon the subject of voluntary manslaughter. The evidence for the State showed an unprovoked murder. The eye-witnesses introduced by the State testified positively that the defendant stepped from behind the tree referred to in the foregoing testimony, and, without provocation, shot and killed Will Harris. If the witnesses for the State spoke truly — and the jury evidently believed them, — the verdict of guilty of murder was a proper one. There is nothing in the testimony of Rush West and Maggie West, quoted above, which would authorize the finding that the homicide was voluntary manslaughter. According to the testimony of Rush West and his wife, the defendant did threaten him with a pistol and place it almost against him. But Rush West was not the slayer. When he saw himself menaced by danger, he fled from the scene and was about fifty yards away before firing was heard; and there is nothing in his testimony to show that Charlie Felder fifed, or that if he fired he did so because provoked thereto by any menace to himself or because of any menace to Rush West. There is nothing - in the
The evidence in the record authorized the verdict, and the court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.