94 Ga. 78 | Ga. | 1894
According to the evidence, Dorminy and Dixon were seated together in a Ijuggy near a shelter where reli
The court, among other things, charged as follows: “ If you believe from the evidence that the defendant began the difficulty, and drew his pistol first, and Dorminy drew next but shot first, the defendant would not be justified in shooting with intent to kill.” By the words “began the difficulty,” taken in connection with the context, the court evidently meant “began the quarrel,” and by the charge above quoted, and other language used, intended to instruct the jury that if Russell did begin the quarrel, and was also the first to draw a pistol, Dorminy, without more, was absolutely justified in drawing and shooting at once, and consequently, that his so doing would not justify Russell in returning the fire, on the idea, as stated in another portion of the charge, that “if Dorminy was justifiable in drawing and shooting, . . . this would be no legal provocation to. the defendant to shoot and attempt to kill Dorminy.”
This was a very close case, and, in our opinion, the court did not correctly and aptly state the law applica
A somewhat similar case is that of Butler v. The State, decided at the last term (92 Ga. 602), in which it was said that an instruction to the jury in the following language would have been appropriate: “ If the assault upon the accused was made with a weapon likely to-produce death and in a manner apparently dangerous to life, the fact that the accused provoked the assault by opprobrious words would not put him in the wrong' for resisting it so far as was necessary to his defence; and a seeming necessity, if acted on in good faith, would be equivalent to a real necessity.”
In the present case, the charge of the court limited
The motion for a new trial contains many grounds. In so far as the questions presented by them can arise at the next trial, the merits of the case have been substantially covered by what is said above. Some slight errors in addition to the main error already pointed out may have been committed, but none are of sufficient importance to require a discussion of them at our hands, nor would they, of themselves, render the granting of a new trial proper. Judgment reversed.