77 Ga. 764 | Ga. | 1886
The defendant, Walter Leonard, was jointly indicted with Lewis Page and Allen Maxwell, for assault with
The only ground, however, insisted upon here is, that as the defendant was not charged as principal - in the second degree, and was not proved to have shot the pistol at the prosecutor, he could not be convicted under this indictment. The judgment given by the court below, in disposing of the motion for a new trial, sets out, in a succinct and clear manner, the law applicable to and governing the disputed question, viz : “ That when principals in the first and second degrees are punished alike, no distinction need be made between them in the indictment; the act of one is the act of all.” Code, §4309; Wharton’s Cr. L. §§129, 130; Hill's case, 28 Ga. 604; Washington’s case, 36 Ga. 222; Plain’s case, 60 Ga. 284, 287. While the charge as to principals in the first and second degrees might have been perhaps more appropriate in a somewhat different form, it answered the practical purpose of explaining how Leonard could be guilty, although he did not do the shooting. This is as concise, accurate and comprehensive a statement of the law as can probably be found in the same space, and we might safely rest the discussion here without an additional word, and would do so were it not for the fact that some' confusion in the mind of the profession has grown out of expressions used
Judgment affirmed.