15 Ga. App. 349 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
Besides the general grounds of the motion for a new trial, error is assigned upon certain instructions of the court on the law of voluntary manslaughter, and the failure of the court to define the meaning of the term “felony,” in the charge as to the right of a person to kill another in order to prevent the commission of a felony upon himself. In the argument in this court something was said in regard to an improper remark of associate counsel for the State, but no such point is made in the record.
A contention urged before us is that the accused was either guilty of murder or justified in the homicide, and that the case falls under the rulings of this court in Reed v. State, 2 Ga. App. 153 (58 S. E. 313), and Reeves v. State, 2 Ga. App. 414, 416 (58 S. E. 548). Of course, if this were true, the court would have erred in charging the jury upon the subject of voluntary manslaughter. But though the defendant, according to his statement, might have been justifiable (certainly if the record had disclosed that the gun held by the deceased was pointed at him), still there is testimony on the part of the prosecution which not only indicates a mutual intent to fight, but also authorized the jury to find that the homicide was committed either under the influence of passion, or because the defendant apprehended that an assault, less than a felony, was about to be committed upon his person. It seems that the killing occurred about 4 o’clock Christmas afternoon. A crowd of negroes, under the influence of whisky, had assembled at the home of the defendant. Among the number was the deceased, who was asleep on a bed in the defendant’s house. The'defendant had left his home, and as he returned he ascertained that there had been a difficulty, and inquired of a woman named Moan, “what all that blood was doing
We conclude that the evidence fully authorized the inference that when the deceased, after being notified by the defendant that if he came on him he would kill him, approached with a gun in his
2-4. The remaining assignments of error are sufficiently dealt with in the headnotes. Judgment affirmed.