161 Ga. 166 | Ga. | 1925
The ruling announced in the first headnote does not require elaboration.
The case of People v. Klein, 305 Ill. 141, 146 (137 N. E. 145), involved a homicide committed by a deputy sheriff by shooting a person in an automobile. The officer fired the shot after the automobile had p&ssed him on the road and the driver had failed to respond to the officer’s command to stop. It was said in the opinion: “Even though it were to he conceded that the evidence shows that the shooting was not done in reckless disregard of human life but in an attempt on the part of the accused to make an arrest, there was no justification for his firing his gun for such purpose. The offense, if one was being committed by the deceased
Harding v. State (Arizona), 225 Pac. 482, was a case where an officer in attempting to arrest a driver shot at a tire to disable the automobile, and killed the driver. It was held that even though the killing was unintentional, the act of shooting being unlawful, the officer committed the offense of involuntary manslaughter. It was said in the opinion: “Hnder section 854 of the Penal Code,
One of the rulings made in State v. Sigman, 106 N. C. 728 (11 S. E. 520), was: “Where a person charged with a misdemeanor escaped from the custody of an officer, and was fleeing to avoid a rearrest, and the officer, being unable to overtake him, threatened to shoot, and, the fugitive not stopping, did fire his pistol when within thirty yards: Held, that the officer was guilty of an assault, no matter whether his intention was to hit the person so fleeing ox simply to intimidate him and thereby induce him to surrender.” It is stated in the text in Wharton on Homicide (3d ed.), 748, § 500: “An officer may not exert force in effecting an arrest for a misdemeanor, or in preventing escape or rescue after such arrest, to the extent of employing a deadly weapon, or of taking life, though without such force the wrong-doer may escape. And this is so whether his purpose was to kill or merely to stop the other’s flight.”
In the instant case the offense for which the defendant was
The 9th ground of the motion for new trial was as follows:
The rulings announced in the headnotes numbered four to ten, inclusive, do not require elaboration.
Judgment reversed.