154 Ga. 408 | Ga. | 1922
In Bailey v. State, 148 Ga. 401 (96 S. E. 862), one question
In the light of what has been said, how stands the case for decision?' The jury would have been authorized to find that there was a i fight between the deceased and the accused with deadly weapons, which resulted in the death of the former and the severe wounding of the latter; that the accused in a boisterous manner addressed profane and vulgar epithets to the deceased, within the hearing of the wife and mother-in-law of the deceased and other .members of the family; that the deceased ordered the accused to desist from his boisterous conduct, and the latter replied by saying it was a public place, and asking what deceased had to do with it; that the deceased replied that he would show him, and started in the store where a baseball bat was known to be, and was followed by the accused; that deceased seized the baseball bat and the fight ensued, the deceased using the baseball bat and the defendant using his pistol. The evidence was conflicting as to the details of the rencounter, but it is difficult to describe accurately the details of such an occurrence; and the jury is not required to take the evidence from one side or the other,- but it is the duty of the jury to consider the evidence as a whole in determining the truth of the case. In the circumstances the jury was authorized to find that there was a mutual combat between the accused and the deceased,
Judgment reversed.