57 Ga. App. 803 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1938
The defendant was indicted and convicted of the offense of “shooting at another.” The evidence for the State shows that the defendant’s father was having a dispute in respect to the possession of certain farm lands. The defendant and his brothers
The defendant took part in the shooting. Several bullets were afterwards found in the tree and one place where a rifle bullet had passed through. The officers fired four times and some eighteen or twenty shots were fired. The deputy and another eyewitness corroborated the testimony of the sheriff. After the shooting was over, several empty shells and cartridges were found where the defendant and his brothers had been standing while the shooting was in progress. One of the brothers was struck in the buttock by buckshot. The defendant and his brothers left the scene without being arrested. The defendant, in his statement, after detailing the dispute over the land which occurred prior to the time of the shooting, stated: “Mr. George Toung was on the north side of us; we saw him, running, and he come up to the truck and he grabbed up the guns, and he tuck the shotgun off the truck and told us to drop it; and the old man, he tuck the gun away from him and he told him to give him the gun; then he come back to the tree and we dropped our guns to our sides, and he throwed up his gun and shot, and we wheeled to run and he shot and the bullet hit Lester, then he wheeled and shot, and I wheeled and shot, and John, he wheeled and shot, and then we made it home.” He also denied that he knew that it was the sheriff. There was no other evidence.
The court refused to give in charge to the jury a written request, in substance as follows:, “An arresting officer, in attempting to make an arrest of a defendant against whom he holds a warrant, . . in which defendant is charged with offenses graded as misdemeanors, may not employ force to the extent of using a deadly
“It is the duty of every person arrested under legal process to quietly submit; and if the offense is committed in the presence of the arresting officer, the rule is the same, and in case the offender refuses to submit, the officer has the right to use such force as is necessary to accomplish the arrest.” Dixon v. State, 12 Ga. App. 17 (6) (76 S. E. 794); Ramsey v. State, 92 Ga. 53 (5) (17 S. E. 613). In Moody v. State, 120 Ga. 868 (4) (48 S. E. 340) it was held: “It was not error to charge, ‘If you find from the evidence that the prosecutor resisted or assaulted the arresting officer, look to the evidence and see whether or not the force used by the officer was in proportion to the resistance used. If so, you should acquit the defendant. But if you should find from the evidence that the assault was greater than was necessary to be used in making the arrest and holding the prisoner, it would be your duty to return a verdict of guilty against the defendant.-’” The attempted arrest by the officers in the present case was a legal and not an illegal arrest. The evidence amply authorized a finding that the defendant knew the capacity in which the officers were acting. The evidence for the State shows that an unusual amount of caution and restraint was exercised by the officers before the attempt to use force. Code, § 27-206, declares: “Every officer is bound to execute the penal warrants placed in his hands.” “The common-law offense of refusal by an officer to execute a warrant delivered to him for that purpose is indictable in this State.” Ormond v. Ball, 120 Ga. 916 (13) (48 S. E. 383). An officer may not, in the execution of a legal criminal warrant, where the charge is a misdemeanor, proceed to the extremity of shedding blood or killing, where the accused is attempting to avoid arrest by flight, even though the offender can not be taken otherwise. Holmes v. State, 5 Ga. App. 166 (3) (62 S. E. 716).
Judgment affirmed.