(After stating the foregoing facts.) The indictment charges in each count the killing of a human being without any intention to do so, but in the commission of “a lawful act, which probably might produce such a consequence, in an unlawful manner,” as provided in the Code, §.26-1009. This same Code section defines a higher grade of involuntary manslaughter as .a killing without any intention to do so, but “in the commission of an unlawful act.” It is difficult to separate sharply an unlawful act from a lawful act done in an unlawful manner. This difficulty is made greater by the requirement of the Code, § 26-201, that to constitute a crime there must be “a violation of a public law, in the commission of which there shall be a union or joint operation of act and intention, or criminal negligence.” When we attempt to apply the involuntary-manslaughter Code section, we must consider in connection therewith the ordinary care sections, 105-201 and 105-401, and the misfortune or accident section 26-404, where it is provided that a person shall not be found guilty of any crime when there is “no evil design, or intention, or culpable neglect,” together with the section which specifies the indispensable ingredients of a crime; and the task of fitting them together and unifying them into a plain, understandable declaration of the law is exceedingly difficult. It is further complicated by the expression, “without due caution and circumspection,” which is found in the Code, § 26-1006, and the expression, “where there has not been observed necessary discretion and caution,” contained in' the Code, § 26-1010.
Many acts of negligence may, in a sense, be unlawful and actionable without any intent to commit a crime or even an intent to do an act which results in a crime or without involving criminal negligence. We may put aside as not constituting crime all careless performance of lawful acts that would not authorize a recovery of damages in a civil suit. We can likewise eliminate
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all negligence that would merely authorize a recovery of damages in a civil suit, for the law is that negligence which is sufficient to constitute a crime is something more' than that degree of negligence necessary to authorize recovery in a suit for damages.
Cain
v.
State, 55 Ga. App.
376 (
In
Pool
v.
State,
87
Ga.
526 (8) (
The State leans heavily upon Commonwealth
v.
Welansky,
Judgment reversed.
