102 Ga. 633 | Ga. | 1897
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff in error was indicted in the superior court of the county of Early, for the murder of Flora Elizabeth Lubjq his wife. He was tried, and the jury rendered a verdict of guilty. He made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled by the presiding judge. He excepted, and we are to determine whether the judge below committed error in overruling the motion. There are eight grounds set out in it. The first two are, that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, and without evidence to support it; and that the verdict is contrary to law. The remaining grounds are based on extracts from the charge made to the jury on the trial of the case. The full charge is not in the record. As to the first two grounds, we are all clearly of opinion that the verdict of guilty was the only one which any jury capable of understanding evidence could have rendered. We are equally as clear that the verdict is not contrary to law, but is amply supported by every principle of law made to punish one who is guilty of murder. But notwithstanding the estimate we put upon the merits of the case, as shown by the record, it is not without difficulty that we are able to affirm the judgment of the court below. Two of our brethren, while fully conceding the atrocious character of the
The fourth assignment of error is, because the court charged the jury that to beat a wife, or strike her, or whip her, is unlawful under any and all circumstances, and if a man kill his wife as a result of the beating, although he may have no intention of killing her, he is guilty of the crime of murder: provided, the natural tendency of his acts was to destroy her life. The specific assignment of error to this part of the charge is, that it tends to exclude from the minds of the jury the consideration of all other grades of homicide except that •of murder. We do not see the force of this objection. It is undoubtedly true that a man has a right to defend himself against the assaults even of his wife, and that he would have .a right to take her life to prevent the commission of a felony upon his person. These principles of justification extend to .all persons, even to a husband as against the attack of a wife. Evidently, however, the charge of the court, properly construed, meant to lay down the proposition, that a man had no right to strike his wife, to whip her, or to beat her, by way of
The fifth assignment of error is, because the court charged the jury, “that the law does not recognize opprobrious words made by the wife to her husband as sufficient cause for him to strike her and kill her; it does not in any such case make it lawful for a man to strike his wife. The law does not recognize any such excuse for a man to whip his wife.” We find no fault with this charge, as applied to the undisputed facts of this case. Opprobrious words or abusive language may be given in evidence on the trial of an indictment for assault, or assault and battery; and such words or language may, or may not, amount to justification, according to the nature and extent of the battery. Penal Code, § 103. Here the plaintiff in error was on trial for the homicide of his wife; and we are clear that any opprobrious words or abusive language which she may have used to him could not justify the homicide, nor could they have the effect to reduce the offense below the grade of murder. They could not be sufficient to justify a passion which would cause him to take her life.
The sixth assignment of error is, because the court erred in charging the jury upon the effect of drunkenness as an excuse for crime. In the main the charge on this point was correct, although the application of the principles in the latter part of the extract excepted to is subject to criticism, and was erroneous. The specific assignment, that the facts in the case did
These, in brief, constitute the grounds of the motion for a new trial. As will be seen, we find errors in the charge of the court; errors which we have said, and now repeat, if the case were doubtful or if the evidence touching the commission of the offense were in conflict, would require at our hands the grant of a new trial. The majority of the court have arrived at the conclusion that, notwithstanding these errors, the judgment of the court below should be affirmed. The evidence was both positive and circumstantial, positive when relating to confessions, otherwise circumstantial. It appears that Luby and his wife occupied a camp at the mouth of a creek on the banks of the Chattahoochee river; that on the afternoon preceding the homicide, he with others procured a quantity of whisky of which he drank freely and came under its influence; the parties separated near his camp. That night very late he came to the house of one of the witnesses, distant a mile or more, and told him there was a corpse at his camp, and that it was his wife’s; and asked the witness to go down there with him. The witness, however, declined to go before the morning. Luby told this witness (who was with him in the afternoon) that after they had separated and he had gone to the camp, he lay .down and went to sleep and slept until after night; when he woke up he called his wife, and getting no answer he went to his boat and found her dead, with her head partly in the water. He told this the night he went to see this witness, and also the morning after, when the latter visited his camp. On visiting the camp in the morning, the witness saw blood on the mattress, but did not examine the body of the woman. Another witness testified, that -about three o’clock in the morning Luby came to his house and asked him to go to the camp, and told him that his wife was dead; he desired the witness and another to go and stay until he could get some others to go. He told this witness that his wife must have been sick, and had a fit and “fell and killed
The defendaxit ixx his statement said, that he and his wife had a quarrel, that she had a little iron-handle knife in her hand axxd made at hixn, that he slapped her, and she said she would leave, axxd cursed hixn. - He said he had whipped her three tixnes about calling him offensive names. He said that she jumped into the boat and shoved off; that he jumped into the water and pulled it back to the bank, and her heels struck something; that he then went back to the tent and lay down. He said, xxot thinking that the lick would kill her, he went to :sleep. He woke up some time in the night, and found she was
These are, in brief, the details of the case as given by Luby, .and as shown by the circumstances detailed by the witnesses. It must be admitted that,- in any view which can be taken of ■the case, Luby killed his wife, and horribly mistreated her before doing so. His own statement shows that she endeavored to get away, and had taken to a boat and pushed away from the bank; that he was so grossly under the influence of liquor .as not to have a clear conception of how the fatal wound was inflicted, but that he struck her “one lick too many and too hard.” As á legal proposition, under these circumstances, ■should a new trial have been granted by the court below, solely •on the grounds of the errors in the charge as before pointed •out? At common law, new trials were not granted in cases of felony, a recommendation to pardon affording the remedy for •one whose conviction should not stand. 16 Am. & Eng.
In 3 Graham and Waterman on New Trials, 862, the rule is thus laid down: “Notwithstanding the misdirection, a new trial will never be granted, if justice has been done, for two reasons: First, if the verdict he correct notwithstanding the misdirection, the .erroneous instruction has been .practically disregarded by the jury, and it is tantamount to no such instructions having been given. Second, the correct result' already having been obtained, a new trial would be super-. fluous; and in applications of this kind, therefore, the main subject of inquiry is as to the verdict, for if that he correct-there is nothing to be relieved against.” Supporting this rule
We have referred to the cases enumerated above, and to the rules which they respectively lay down, to justify our ruling in this case; and these, with numerous other cases, seem to us to establish the proposition, that the great object which a court of review has in considering motions for a new trial on the ground of improper instructions to juries, is to see if justice has been done to the defendant. On one side are to be considered his rights, under the provisions of law, that he shall have a fair and impartial trial; and on the other hand it is the duty of courts to protect society, to enforce the law, to punish criminals. If the error complained of be one which tended to destroy any right of the defendant, a new trial should be granted. If on an examination of* the evidence in the case the court should be satisfied that the result of a new trial, by qualified jurors, would and ought to be the same, there is no reason or principle which would demand a new trial. Our own court has in a number of instances referred to this question. In the case of Wise v. State, 34 Ga. 348, complaint (as here) was made in the motion for a new trial as to the charge of the court on the drunkenness of the defendant. That. charge was subject to criticism (as it is here), and, in the language of the court, “was not altogether happy.” There Chief Justice Lumpkin, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “While we admit the charge of the court was not as guarded as it might have been, no charge that the judge could have given could or ought to have changed the verdict, founded on the statements of Wise himself.” In the case of Braswell v. State, 42 Ga. 609, this court ruled that “when the facts of the, case show clearly that the act of the killing was without any ¡ legal provocation, and in fact constituted the crime of murder under the law, held, that this court will not interfere to set aside the verdict for the charge of the court, though expressed in language too strong against the accused, if from all the evi
Again, in the case of Hill v. State, 63 Ga. 585, in dealing with a motion for a new trial on the ground of an erroneous charge, Bleckley, Justice, delivering the opinion of the court, says: “It seems quite certain that the charge was not erroneous ; but did we so consider it, we should do as was done in both Parker v. State, and Tucker v. State, that is, affirm the judgment, the evidence being beyond all question sufficient, and the verdict indubitably correct.” In the case of Hagar v. State, 71 Ga. 164, Chief Justice Jackson, on the question of the admission or rejection of testimony, said: “The evidence is overwhelming that the defendant is guilty; and where such is the case, even errors in the admission or the rejection of testimony, or in the charge of the court, will not operate so as to require a new .trial.”
We have striven to give a fair exposition of the legal principles applicable to the questions involved here, as we understand them. In applying them, with an endeavor to be just, reference may profitably be had to the teachings of some of the sages of the law. Lord Kenyon said, that “the natural leaning of the mind is in favor of prisoners, and the mild manner in which the laws of this country are administered has been the subject of complaint with some, that the judges have given way too easily to formal objections in behalf of prisoners.” Chitty also remarks, that “in criminal cases where the public security is so deeply interested in the prompt execution of justice, it seems the minor consideration should give way to the greater, and technical objections be overlooked, rather than the ends of-society be defeated.” 1 Chitty’s Criminal Law, 171.
With the law established as we have undertaken to show it
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. For the reasons assigned in the dissenting opinion in the case of Perry v. State, ante, 381, we dissent from the judgment in this ease.