125 Ga. 310 | Ga. | 1906
The defendant in this case was indicted for murder. The person alleged to have been slain was his wife. The homicide was not denied. The defense set up by the accused was that he .shot at his wife’s paramour, one Emmett, with whom he had a-short time before, at a spot very neay his dwelling, found her in the act of adultery, and that while shooting at Emmett he inflicted the mortal wound upon his wife. The jury returned a verdict finding the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter. He made a mo-'
According to the defendant’s own statement made at the trial, after having found his wife and her alleged paramour in the commission of the criminal act, he walked off and called a witness to the scene; then going to a neighbor’s house, he returned and went upon his own front porch, where he saw his wife and Emmett coming “through the kitchen, like, through the near way into the large room.” He entered and immediately began firing upon Emmett, one of the shots taking effect in the body of his wife, with fatal results. The motion for new trial contained several grounds, but the one most strongly insisted upon by counsel for the defendant is the following: “The judge erred in charging the jury as follows, to wit: ‘If the act of adultery is over, no jury has the right to say that it would be justifiable homicide. If the act of adultery is over, and the defendant kills his wife or her paramour, it is voluntary manslaughter, and no jury has the right to say that he is justifiable.’” It is alleged that “this portion of the charge was error: 1st. Because it precludes the jury from saying that the slayer might be justifiable even though he caught his wife under circumstances indicating that the act was just over, and acting promptly. 2d. Because it was taking from the jury the right to say that the defendant was justifiable in slaying the seducer of his wife,'or her paramour, after the act of adultery is over, though he acted promptly in that outburst of passion supposed to be- irresistible, when he found the great wrong that had been done him. 3d. Because said portion of the charge directed the jury, under the facts in the ease, to find the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and said direction was injurious to defendant. 4th. Because the charge took the facts as testified to in this case and told the jury that if the evidence as shown in this case was true, the defendant would be guilty of voluntary manslaughter; and that said charge took from the jury their prerogative of applying the law to.the facts, and deprived the defendant of the right of trial by jury as contemplated by the constitution of the State and the United States.” It appears from the whole charge, which is set out in the -record, by taking the court’s instructions immediately preceding the passage here criticised, that the charge upon the point under consideration was as- follows: .“The court is not here to say that, but
Up to this point we have discussed' the charge in the light of the defendant’s statement alone, but justice to the trial judge would require that it should be considered also with reference to the sworn testimony in the case. And thus viewing it, it is still more plainly manifest that the defendant has no right to complain. But basing what we say upon the uncontroverted evidence alone, and without going into a great mass of evidence which conflicts with the statement of the accused, we find that the defendant, after having discovered his wife in the very act of adultery, deliberately brought an acquaintance, who was standing near, to witness the outrage against him,, and without attempting then to punish the guilty, or to prevent the completion of the wrong, he went to the house of a neighbor, borrowed a pistol upon some pretext, returned to his home, and, meeting there his wife and her lover, fired shot after shot at the latter as he faced him and as he fled. Under these facts it is needless to argue, or cite authority to show, that the court did not err in charging the jury a principle of law applicable to the rights of a husband upon coming face to face with the seducer of his wife after the act is over, and that it was not required to give them instructions in reference to what a husband may rightfully and within the law do when he comes upon his wife in company with a man under such circumstances as will justify him in concluding that an act of adultery is “just over or about to begin.”
If there were any inaccuracies in the charge with reference to a higher grade of homicide than manslaughter, or in the court’s illustrations as to what constitutes legal malice, the error was not of such a nature as to require a reversal in this case; as, under the evidence and the prisoner’s statement, the jury could not properly have rendered any other verdict than one finding the defendant guilty, either of voluntary manslaughter or of a higher offense. See Johnson v. State, 14 Ga. 55(11), 65.
Judgment affirmed.