12 Ga. App. 526 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
Hill, C. J.
Frank McDonald was tried under an indictment charging him with the offense of murder, and was convicted of voluntary manslaughter. The case is here on exceptions to the judgment overruling his motion for a new trial. As we feel compelled to grant a new trial for an error in the charge of the court, we will not discuss the character or weight of the evidence. It may be stated, however^ that the evidence of the guilt of the accused did not demand his conviction. We therefore the more readily set aside the verdict for the error of law which we will now consider.
The contention that the instruction was harmless because the conviction was of voluntary manslaughter, and that, therefore, the erroneous instruction did not affect the verdict, is not well taken. The evidence relied upon as showing a case of justifiable homicide in self-defense may have been sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury, not only as to the charge of murder, but also as to the charge of voluntary manslaughter, but it might not have been considered sufficient by the jury to produce conviction of its truth beyond a reasonable doubt, and thus the accused would have been deprived, under this instruction, of the legal value of his evidence. The instruction was not general in its character; it was an application of the law to evidence in behalf of the accused, and it was a positive, concrete instruction to the jury that this evidence would not be sufficient to acquit the accused, unless the jury were • convinced of its truth beyond a reasonable doubt. Doubtless the learned and experienced trial judge did not intend to tell the jury that the burden was upon the accused to prove his defense beyond a reasonable doubt, but no other rational construction can be placed upon his language, and it is wholly immaterial that the error was not intentional. It was just as harmful to the accused as though it had been an intentional misstatement of the