137 Ga. 842 | Ga. | 1912
W. B. Norton was indicted for the murder of B. V. Smith. There was evidence tending to show the following among other facts: On November 10, 1910, the sheriff of Bibb county received a telephone message from a man who lived in the country, stating that some negroes had shot at his child or children, and requesting that officers be sent to arrest them. The person making the request also provided an automobile in order to overtake the negroes, who were in a wagon. Norton was a deputy sheriff. He was high tempered. On that day he had been drinking, and was under the influence of liquor. One witness testified that the accused told
In his statement the accused claimed, that, when the wagon stopped, the occupant threw his hand to his hip pocket; that the accused told him to come up there and they would talk it over, which was refused; that the accused told the man in the wagon to move his hand and that the accused would go down there and talk it over, which was refused; that the man in the wagon brought his hand forward with something in it, which the accused could not distinguish in the dark, and he shot at the man’s hand, not intending to-kill him, but to disable him; and that he picked up a pistol where the man had dropped it. A witness for the defense testified that he heard the conversation as stated by the accused. There was evidence to the effect that Smith was unarmed. After the homicide, the accused left the State and remained away for several months, when he returned voluntarily and surrendered. He explained this on the ground of bad health, and that he did not want to lie in jail. There was much other evidence which need not be stated. It was ample to authorize the conviction. A good deal of testimony on behalf of the defendant was to the purport that it was too dark to tell whether the man in the wagon was a white man or a negro, and in his statement the accused said that he did not know that it was a white man he had shot until so informed by another deputy. But the homicide was unlawful, regardless of the color of the person slain.
The headnotes sufficiently explain the rulings made. Grounds of the motion not specifically mentioned were of such a character as to require neither the grant of a new trial nor an extended discussion. In one or two of the charges complained of, there may have been some slight inaccuracy. On the subject of the right to resist an unlawful arrest, and to kilTthe person seeking to make it, if necessary, the language of the court was not entirely free from criticism. But, under the facts above stated, and in the light of the entire charge, we do not think that this should furnish any ground for reversal.
Judgment affirmed.