81 Ga. 645 | Ga. | 1888
On Sunday morning, Fry killed his wife by stabbing her in the neck. They occupied a room ad
“I got up, and she was out in the yard sweeping. She had dressed both children. I called to the children, and she said to them, ‘ Don’t go to that nigger, such a nigger as that isn’t pa to you.’ I I said, 1 that’s a nice way to talk; some one might come along and hear you say that and they would believe it, and if they didn’t believe it, it wouldn’t do for you to say that.’ She replied, ‘ You are no daddy to them children; they don’t favor you, and you are not their father.’ I said, 1 Don’t you tell me that any more, and let this be the last time you tell it; if I am not the father, you needn’t tell me so; you have kept it hid this long, and you can keep it hid longer.’ She said, ‘ I have told you enough, that you are not their father.’ I said, ‘You needn’t say that anymore; I don’t want to hurt you and don’t want to injure you in any way, and won’t do it if I can help it.’ She came on in the house then, and cooked a little something to eat, and set down and went to eating. I put on my clothes. She never fixed anything for me to eat, and I said to her, ‘ You never put me a plate on the table; what kind of a way is this you have of doing? You got up and start off about telling me I wasn’t their father, and getting me mad, and you haven’t fixed me no breakfast.’ She said, ‘ I don’t reckon you need any breakfast ’; and I said, ‘ What do you mean by telling me I wasn’t their father ? Do you mean what you said ? ’ And she said, ‘ Certainly I do’; and I was that mad that I cut her. I was madder than I ever was in my life, and at the time I didn’t have the first thought at all.”
There was no evidence to establish this colloquy except tbe statement of tbe accused. Touching tbe statement, tbe court instructed tbe jury that-they might be
The jury found the accused guilty of murder, and the court sentenced him to death. He moved for a new-trial on the general grounds, and because the court erred in giving-in charge to the jury section 4325 of the code, respecting voluntary manslaughter. Also, in charging upon that section, in substance, as follows : “ Provocation by words, -threats and contemptuous gestures are by the very terms of our code insufficient. Words used by one party to another will not justify a killing; words, as many as a person pleases to use, .are no justification. Provocation by words or threats is not sufficient to reduce a killing from murder to manslaughter, because the statute expressly says so.”
There can be no two opinions of the ample sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the verdict.
Judgment affirmed.