101 Ga. 574 | Ga. | 1897
Section 103 of the Penal Code provides : “On the trial of an indictment for an assault, or an assault and battery, the defendant may give in evidence to the jury any opprobrious words, or abusive language, used by the prosecutor, or person assaulted or beaten; and such words may or may not amount to a justification, according to the nature and extent of the battery, all of which shall be determined by the jury.” Construing these words, it has been held by this court, that one may justify an assault made upon another with “a small walking-stick,” when provoked by the use by the latter of
It was shown by the evidence in the present case that the accused struck the prosecutor upon the head with a “Winchester shot-gun” weighing eight pounds, using it as a club and delivering a blow of sufficient force to break the stock thereof, which was made of black walnut. The effect of this blow upon the prosecutor was to knock him out of a window in which, or near which, he was sitting, and to' render him totally unconscious for some time. Indeed, though “conscious off and on that night, [he] was not sensible till next morning [and] was laid up from that lick about two weeks” — a little over two weeks. In his statement, the accused, referring to the character of the assault made, by him upon the prosecutor, said : “I hit him a light lick; I didn’t hit him a hard one”; and accounted for the breaking of the gun-stock by explaining that “the stock of that gun was cracked right, at the stock.” He did not, however, undertake to deny that, nevertheless, the force of the blow was. sufficient to knock the prosecutor out of the window and render him insensible, nor did the accused offer in his behalf any evidence to contradict the testimony of the State’s witnesses that such was the fact. The only excuse set up by him for making the assault was the use by the prosecutor of opprobrious words and insulting language addressed to and concerning him.
It is obvious that a gun such as is above described is a deadly weapon, whether used as a firearm, or as a club; and, in view of the undisputed facts which appeared in evidence, the bare statement of the accused that the blow which he struck with it was “a light lick,” not “a hard one,” would not have authorized the jury to conclude that “the battery was not dis-proportioned to the insult offered,” which is the test as to justification laid down in Thompson’s case, supra. The descrip
Without serious difficulty we hold, as matter of law, that the light (?) blow aimed at and taking effect upon the head of the prosecutor, being delivered with a deadly weapon and constituting an assault “apparently dangerous to life,” was one which the accused could not justify under the provisions of the statute relied upon; for mere-provocation bywords will not excuse an assault of this nature and extent, “though the assailant may really intend only a moderate battery, and not to kill or seriously injure.” Boatwright v. State, cited above. So far as the question of justification is concerned, what the accused actually did, not what he intended to do, is the test. Notwithstanding he may not have meditated murder, or even great bodily harm, he is nevertheless strictly accountable for the actual results of his criminal act.
The facts of the present case, as to which there was no conflict, imperatively demanded a conviction of assault with intent to murder. The offense of assault and battery was not
Though the motion for a new trial contains a number of grounds, the above discussion covers every question of enough importance to require special notice. Suffice it to say that no error was committed by the court which demands, or would authorize, a rehearing of the case.
Judgment affirmed.