90 Ga. 691 | Ga. | 1893
1. Without a specific intent to kill as charged in the indictment, the offence of assault with intent to murder cannot be committed. The existence of such intent is matter of fact to be ascertained by the jury from all the evidence before them, and not matter for legal inference or presumption from only a part of the evidence, or even from the whole of it. Legal presumptions arising out of the facts may be used to show that the assault was malicious, but an assault which does not result in death may be malicious just as well where the intent to kill is absent as where it is present. There may be malice without an intent to kill, just as there may be malice without an actual killing. That an intent is evil, and therefore malicious, so far as it goes, does not involve the consequence that it goes farther in law than it does in fact. The law will certainly charge an evil doer with all the natural consequences of his unlawful act which the act produces, but why should it impute to him, by mere presumption, an intention to add a consequence which was not produced ? The jury, as matter
Both briefs furnished us in the case at bar are sufficiently striking to deserve mention. That of Mr. McLester is intensely classical. It opens thus: “ "When the mother of Achilles plunged him in the Stygian waters his body became invulnerable, except the heel by which she held him, and afterwards when he and Polyxena, the daughter of the .King of Troy, who were lovers, met in the Temple of Apollo to solemnize their marriage, Paris, the brother of Hector, lurking behind the image of Apollo, slew Achilles by shooting him in the heel with an arrow.”
The brief of the solicitor-general is less poetic, but equally irrelevant. It cites seven cases from the Georgia Reports, not one of which has any bearing on the question, for in each of the cited cases the attempt to kill was successful. When a homicide actually occurs from the voluntary use of a deadly weapon, an intention to kill is very much more certain than it is when the man assaulted is not killed but only shot in the toe.
Judgment reversed.