129 Ga. 770 | Ga. | 1907
John Harper was convicted of the murder of Ben 0.' Keith, and excepts to the court’s refusal to grant him a new trial. The proof submitted by the State disclosed that the homicide occurred under these circumstances: A warrant had issued from the superior court of Eannin county against the defendant, for a murder alleged to have been committed in that county in December, 1906. He had eluded the officers of Eannin county •and had taken refuge in Murray county, passing under an assumed name. The deceased was the sheriff of Murray county, and had been pointed out to the defendant as such. The deceased received ■notice that the defendant was domiciled-at a certain house in Murray county, and was wanted by the authorities of Eannin county to answer to the crime of murder. Accompanied by a posse, on July 25, 1907, the sheriff went to the house where the defendant was staying, to effect his arrest. The defendant was not at the house, and the sheriff and poss.e stationed themselves so as to keep the house under surveillance. The deceased and a young man named Foster concealed themselves behind a stump. About nine o’clock at night the defendant came along the highway and was ■commanded by the sheriff to halt. As soon as the sheriff called upon him to halt he fired upon the sheriff. The sheriff returned the fire. The defendant fired two or three times, inflicting a mortal wound, which caused the sheriff’s death three or four days later. The defendant was immediately taken in custody. He was armed with a very large pistol, loaded with metal-capped bullets. He was asked why he carried the pistol, and replied "that he didn’t aim to go back to Fannin county, and aimed for that gun to defend him.” He said that he shot the deceased to get awaj from him.
A bench warrant against the defendant, issued from Eannin superior court, upon an indictment for murder, was allowed in evidence. The warrant was admissible as one of 'the elements tending to show that the defendant was- a fugitive from justice. The language of Lumpkin, J., in Smalls' case, 99 Ga. 31 (25 S. E. 614), is peculiarly appropriate to the facts of the present case: “The vitally controlling issue in the case was whether, in committing the homicide, the accused was resisting a lawful attempt to arrest him, or in good faith making a defense against an unlawful assault upon himself, or what he honestly believed was such an assault. The motives of the accused were directly in issue, and any evidence fairly illustrating or throwing light upon the same was competent as being explanatory of his conduct under the surrounding circumstances.”
Exception is also taken to the following excerpt from the charge: “As I have said, if you find that he shot and killed Keith to prevent an arrest, as the State contends, he would be guilty of the offense of murder, whether he knew Keith was an officer or not.” This excerpt was taken from the court’s instruction as to the grade of a homicide when committed by an escaped felon to prevent an arrest. The exception to the quoted extract was that it was misleading, and caused the jury to ignore the defendant’s theory of the case. The assignment of error does not disclose the defendant’s theory, and we must look to his statement to discover it. There we find it to be justifiable homicide. A sheriff may arrest an escaped felon, on probable ground of suspicion, without a warrant. Jackson v. State, 30 Ga. 426. And so majr a private person. Penal Code, §900. “To slay an officer to avoid being taken in custody, knowing that his object is to make an arrest for felony committed several months previously, is murder; but done suddenly, without knowledge of his purpose or official character, and without malice, it is manslaughter. Belief, or reasonable grounds of belief, would be equivalent to knowledge.” Croom v. State, 85 Ga. 718 (11 S. E. 1035, 21 Am. St. R. 179). There
■ After a careful consideration of the entire record, we find nothing which requires the grant of a new trial; and the judgment is
Affirmed.