64 Ga. 52 | Ga. | 1879
The defendant was indicted for murder and found guilty of voluntary manslaughter; a new trial was denied him, and he excepted.
In view of the facts disclosed in the record, we think that this charge was erroneous. The deceased had severe wounds in the back, one physician testifying that they killed him or largely contributed to his death; the accused had no such wounds in the back ; the two men were fighting in the dark, and Pickett, if he cut one of them in the back with a knife, making several bad gashes, in all human probability cut the deceased, and if deceased died from these wounds, or would not have died but for these wounds in the back, Pickett may have killed him, though intending the licks or stabs for the accused. The conversation occurred just as Flanegan got away, and while deceased was bleeding with the wounds of which he died. Pickett was not making evidence for Flanegan, if he made the remark. It was part of the res gestee. It was almost instantaneous with the stabbing which the witness swore he said he gave ; therefore being res gestes, it became an act done during the fight or evidence thereof, if he said it, and was testimony not only to impeach Gunnels, but' to show that he did the stabbing in the back of deceased by mistake. It is clear therefore to us that the court was wrong to exclude it from the jury except to be used as impeaching the other witness. The jury had the right to consider it for all purposes, to be weighed by them with the other evidence. O'Shields vs. The State, 55 Ga., 696 ; Mitchum vs. The State, 11 Ga., 615; 1 Greenleaf Ev., 10 Ed., §§108-114.
Judgment reversed.