A witnеss for the state volunteered the following testimony: "Harold Holcomb was standing there at the bar and he said, 'Someone as sorry as Rudy ought to be killed.’ He said, 'What is the matter with Rudy?’ I said, T don’t know what you are talking about.’ Somehow he thought Rudy told his Probation Officer....” At this point a motion for mistrial wаs made which the court, after cautioning the jury at some length, overruled. The remark was not elicited by the prosecution but volunteered by the witness, and the court was scrupulously fair in attempting to disabuse the jury’s minds of any remark calculated to put the defendant’s character in issue. The statement itself was ambiguous since "his probation officer” could have referred either to Holcomb or Burroughs. Motions for mistrial are largely in the discretion of the trial judge, especially where the cause of the motion lies in the voluntary remark of a witnеss not invited by the court or counsel, and, where the jury is properly instructed and the remark is not so flagrantly prejudicial as to violate the fair trial rights of the defendant, the court’s discretion will not be overturned.
Hooks v. State,
Where photographs of a deceased are not spеctacularly gruesome, and where they do clearly indicate the cause of death, it is well settled in this state that they are admissible in evidence.
Bryan v. State,
The defendant signed a pаper which was introduced in evidence and part of which stated: "Myself and wife and Jimmy Owens were standing outside talking when Rudy came out the doоr. Rudy hit my wife and caught her by her ponytail. Then Rudy
*156
hit me and had me over a car and was beating me. I then pulled my gun out of my right pocket and shot Rudy. I fired my gun оne time. Then Rudy ran back inside the club and I left and went home. Approximately two hours later the sheriff of Madison County came to my house аnd got me.” Objection is made to instructions by the court on the subject of confession and flight on the ground that they are unsupported by the evidence. Mere incriminating statements will not authorize a charge on confessions.
Oliphant v. State, 52
Ga. App. 105 (
"There is no law to prohibit a juror from taking notes of any of the evidencе.”
Thomas v. State,
Holcomb does not contend, and there is no evidence to support the theory, that the pistol was fired accidentally or negligently. At the trial he testified that when Burroughs came toward him it scared him, and he just pulled the gun out, not meaning to shoot the man, and fired it one time. Thus, the defendant’s theory, rather hazily expressed, was either that the shooting was the result of fear or that it was necessitated by self defense. The case for the state made out the crime of either murder or manslaughter, depending upon whether the jury believed the shot was fired (as thеy had a right to from other evidence) either deliberately or in the heat of passion in mutual combat. Under these circumstances, а charge on either grade of involuntary manslaughter is not required nor are instructions on misfortune or accident appropriate.
Golatt v. State,
The twelfth request to charge reads: "I charge you that if you believe from the evidence that the defendant reasonably believеd that it was necessary to shoot the deceased to prevent great bodily injury or death to himself, or to prevent the commission оf a forcible felony upon himself, the law says that under such circumstances the defendant would have been justified in using force likely to cause death or great bodily harm toward the deceased, including shooting the deceased, and if you should so find you should acquit the defendant.” This request was refused, and the court nowhere instructed the jury that if they believed the defendant justified he should be acquitted. "Justifiable homicide is a substantive and affirmative defense; and where such defense is in issue and the court does not specifically, or in general terms, inform the jury that, if they should believe the defendant justified, it would be their duty to acquit him, a new trial must be granted.”
*158
Boyd v. State,
Judgment reversed.
