105 Ga. 242 | Ga. | 1898
Allan Parks was indicted and found guilty of the murder of Walker Brown. The verdict was accompanied with a recommendation to life imprisonment: The evidence of the attending physician showed that the deceased died from a gunshot-wound inflicted in the back just below the shoulder-blade. The effect of the shot was a complete paralysis of the lower extremities and a loss of sensation and motion. The testimony of J. P. Marett was to the effect that deceased was shot centrally in the back, close to the spinal column, and died on Sunday evening. The witness further testified as follows: On Saturday before his death, he told me that his condition was bad; that he knew he was going to die; that half of him was dead at that time, and that he was dying then. He said that Allan Parks shot him; that he had been working for Allan the day before, and Allan had promised him, if he would meet him at his house at four o’clock the next morning, he would let him have some whisky; that he went to Allan’s house and was standing in the yard opposite the house when Allan Parks and another negro man whom he took to be Ben Parks, drove up; that they drove the horse to the back end of the house, and accused jumped out of the huggy and came slipping into the front yard and cocked his pistol; that he tried to tell him not to shoot, but that he did shoot at him, and deceased fell over and could not speak for a while; he then called for help. Deceased further said that he wanted Parks prosecuted, and that he had sent for witness to make the statement so that he could be a witness on the trial. Deceased was twenty-two or twenty-three years old, and unmarried. The mind of the deceased at the time he made the statement was in its normal condition.— Sam Williams testified for the defendant that he was at the house of the accused when
The accused made a motion for a new trial, the first three grounds of which are, because the verdict is contrary to evidence and Avithout evidence to support it; that the verdict is decidedly and strongly against the weight of the evidence, and contrary to laAV and the principles of justice and equity. The motion contained other grounds, which will be duly considered. As the ease goes back to be tried again under principles of law not submitted on the trial in which the present verdict Avas rendered, we make no ruling on the grounds that the verdict is contrary to the evidence, etc.
It is also complained that the court failed to give in charge-to the jury, although no request so to do was made, the law of involuntary manslaughter; counsel'for plaintiff in error insist-ing that the statement of the accused rendered the law touching ■ this grade of homicide applicable.- The statement of the prisoner is not evidence; and while it is the duty of the trial judge, without a request, to charge the law applicable to all the theories-of the case raised by the evidence, yet as the statement is not evidence, it is not his duty, without a request, to charge a theory of the law which is raised solely by the statement of the accused. Had the request been submitted so to charge, we think that the-law of involuntary manslaughter should have been given, as in our judgment it was directly applicable to the circumstances of the homicide as stated by the accused. According to his theory the deceased was a' trespasser upon his premises, and one concerning whose presence, in view of the time, place, and circumstances of the trespass, the defendant had a lawful right to inquire and repel. While one- has not the right to slay -another who trespasses on his land or property, without more, it is yet a duty which a man owes both to his family and himself, to ascertain the motive of one whom he discovers on his premises under - suspicious circumstances, and to prevent the invasion of his-house and immediate premises; and such duty becomes more pressing in the darkness of the night than in the light of the- ' day. It was the right of the accused, on hearing a suspicious-noise, to inquire into it. It was not his right, if he had dis—
Judgment reversed.