Chаrlie Joyner Jr. was indicted and convicted, in the Superior Court of Wilkinson County, of the murder of Clinton Taylor. The jury recommended mercy and he was sentenced to life imprisonment. His motion for a new trial, as amended, was overruled and he excepted. All of those present at the time of the homicide testified as witnesses for the State, and their evidence in substance shows: The accused and the deceased met and were together at a store in Irwinton during the afternоon of December 10, 1950. They were joking or teasing each other about something-concerning pine or broom straw. Their joking or teasing culminated in an argument *436 between them, during the course of which the deceased called the аccused a damn liar. The accused started out of the store and told the deceased not to repeat what he had just said. The deceased followed the accused a few feet to the front door of the store аnd again called him a damn liar. At that time the accused slapped the deceased and left the store. After the accused left and on finding that he did not have his knife, the deceased looked for a pistol at the placе in the store where the owner usually kept one, but found none. Jim Bell’s unloaded shotgun was in the store, and one of the witnesses took and kept possession of it. The accused, shortly after his leaving, returned to and re-entered the store with a pistol in his hand and, without speaking to any one, immediately began shooting at the deceased, who was then standing in the store. The first shot missed the deceased, striking the counter about two feet from the floor; the next two entered his body neаr the heart, producing death almost instantly. The accused then left the store. The deceased did or said nothing to the accused upon his return to the store, except one' of the witnesses testified that he picked up a stoоl he was standing by as the accused entered the front door of the store with a pistol in his hand, but another witness said that he did not pick up the stool until after the accused had shot at him the first time. One of the witnesses said that the accused was out of the store for two or three minutes between the first encounter and the shooting. Another said that he was away four or five minutes before he came back; and Alec Bell testified that he was out long enough to go to his home and baсk. The deceased, according to the testimony of all of the witnesses, had no weapon, except the stool; and one of the witnesses said that he held it up in front of himself with its legs pointing toward the accused; and another witness sаid that he picked it up after he was first shot at and threw it at the accused. The defendant made a statement to the jury, which agreed fully with the State’s evidence as to his first encounter with the deceased. He also stated: that he returnеd to the store for the purpose of getting some cigarettes which he had purchased when first there, but which he left; that, when he entered the store, the deceased was standing back of the counter and Oscar Willie Robertson had а shotgun; that tlje *437 deceased came from behind the counter, picked up a stool and started toward him like lightning; that he told the deceased to get back, but he kept coming on him; that he first shot into the floor, thinking that would stop him, but it did not; and that he then shot the deceased, who was by then within a foot of him, and the deceased “went down with the stool.” The defendant said nothing about his possession of the pistol.
The court charged literally Code §§ 26-1002, 26-1003, and 26-1004, defining murder, express malice, and imрlied malice. He also instructed the jury that “Legal malice is not ill-will or hatred. It is the unlawful intention to kill, without excuse, justification or mitigation, which intention, however, must exist at the time of the killing alleged but it is not necessary for that intention to exist for any length of time before the killing. In legal contemplation a man may form the intention to kill, do the killing instantly and regret the deed as soon as it is done. Legal malice is the intent unlawfully to take human life, where the law neither mitigates nor justifies the killing.” The charge is attacked upon the ground that the court, in connection with his charge on malice as an element of murder, failed to tell the jury that, if the State’s evidence showed circumstances of alleviation, mitigation, or justification, the burden of proving malice would not be carried by the State. There is no merit in this. So far as the record shows, there was no request for a fuller charge upon the subject of malice than that given by the court, and it is settled by this court that, in the absence of such a request, the charge as given was sufficient.
Mann
v.
State,
124
Ga.
760 (
During his argument, the solicitor-general stated to the jury: “He (meaning the defendant) walked in the door with a pistol in his hand and they (the people in the store) already knew what he (the defendant) would do with a pistol.” It is not necessary for us to determine whether or not such argument was proper or improper; and this is so because its alleged
*438
impropriety was first called to the court’s attention and complained of in the amendment to the defendant’s motion for a new trial, which was too late. It has been held by this court many times that, when improper argument is made to the jury by an attorney for one of the parties, it is necessary, in order to make the same a basis for review, that opposing counsel make proper objection to it at the time made or invoke some ruling or instruction from the court respecting it, either by way of reprimanding counsel, or of instructing the jury to disregard it, or of declaring a mistrial. A party can not during the trial ignore what he thinks to be an injustice, take his chance on a favorable verdict, and complain later. Code, § 81-1009;
Croom
v.
State,
90
Ga.
430 (
, On rеdirect examination of the State’s witness, Katie Willis, the solicitor-general asked: “Do you remember last year when he (meaning the defendant) shot another negro in the belly?” The witness, “Yes”. Defendant’s counsel: “We object to that question аnd answer. It is inadmissible.” The solicitor-general, speaking to the court in the presence of the jury: “We are going to prove it.” Defendant’s counsel: “We move for a mistrial because the solicitor-general has now put the defendant’s character in issue, and the question and answer is prejudicial to defendant.” The Court: “I rule the evidence . out and, gentlemen, you will disregard that question and the answer in response to it.” The court then overruled the defendant’s motion for а mistrial. Even if it can be said that the related occurrence was erroneous, as contended, it is sufficient to say that the error complained of was subsequently cured by the prompt action of the trial judge in ruling the evidence out аnd instructing the jury to disregard the solicitor’s question and the answer in response thereto.
Walker
v.
State,
124
Ga.
97 (
Another special ground of the defendant’s motion for a new trial alleges that the сourt erred in omitting to charge, without request, the law concerning voluntary manslaughter as related to mutual combat. “In all cases of voluntary manslaughter, there must be some actual assault upon the person killing, or an attempt by the рerson killed to commit a serious personal injury on the person killing, or other equivalent circumstances to justify the excitement of passion, and to exclude all idea of deliberation or malice, either express or impliеd.” Code, § 26-1007. Under this section of our Code, it has been held many times that, “If upon a sudden quarrel, the parties fight upon the 'spot, or presently agree and fetch their weapons and fight, and one of them is killed, such killing is but voluntary manslaughter, no matter who strikes the first blow.”
Ray
v.
State,
16
Ga.
223;
Gann
v.
State,
30
Ga.
67;
Tate
v.
State,
46
Ga.
148, 167;
Hart
v.
State,
135
Ga.
356 (
The evidence authorized the verdict; and the judge, under the rulings above made, did not err in refusing to grant a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
