Beck, P. J.
Evans Pope was tried under an indictment charging him with the offense of murder; and the jury trying the case returned a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation, of life imprisonment. The defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled.
1. The court in his charge to the jury defined malice as follows: “Malice is a state of mind, or intention, to kill under such circumstances as the law would not justify nor in any way excuse the intention if the killing occurred. It is the deliberate *704intention unlawfully to take the life of a human being under such circumstances as would not justify or excuse that intention if the killing occurred.” While not entirely accurate, the charge as given is not ground for the grant of a new trial. Mann v. State, 124 Ga. 760 (53 S. E. 324, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 934) ; Worley v. State, 136 Ga. 231 (71 S. E. 153). If the defendant desired a more precise definition of malice, one more nearly adapted to his theory of the case under the facts and circumstances proved, it should have been requested of the court.
2. The court gave to the jury the following instructions: “ The defendant in this case by his plea contends that he did not fire the fatal shot that killed the deceased. The 8tate, on the other hand, charges and attempts to prove that the defendant did fire the fatal shot that resulted in the death of the deceased; and that forms the issue for you to try in this case.” No witness claiming to be an eye-witness to the shooting testified that the defendant fired the deadly shot. The defendant himself in his statement, in, effect, denied shooting at all. He did not say expressly that he did not shoot, but his statement taken in its entirety amounts to a denial upon his part that he did the shooting which resulted in the death of McLendon. He recites in that statement how his daughter jumped out of a window and he went up the road in pursuit of her, and how, on the road, he met one Horace Johnson and inquired of him if the latter had met any one, to which Johnson replied in the affirmative, naming the place. The accused then states that he then went further' along the road, walked up to the door, knocked on it two or three times, and that after a while “they shot — they shot again, and I heard somebody talking very low, and somebody came to the door and said, ‘I don’t want to kill you.’” Thereupon, the defendant states, he told his wife and requested her to go with him “ and she went up there with me, and she knocked on the door, and they wouldn’t let her in, and she came back. We- got in the car and went down the road and went back home, and that is the way it was.” The statement is very vague and indefinite as to how far the prisoner followed his daughter; it barely indicates what house he went to and what he did there. But upon the vital question as to whether he fired a gun or pistol, the statement makes a practical denial that ho shot. He says that he knocked *705oil tlie door, “and they shot.” The court had the right to charge the jury on the theory that the defendant denied the shooting.
3. In the absence of a contention upon the part of the defendant that the killing was justifiable or that it was voluntary manslaughter, the court was not bound to present the issues as to whether the killing was justifiable homicide or manslaughter. We do not mean that it was necessary for the defendant distinctly to claim in his statement that the killing was manslaughter or justifiable homicide. If he had introduced witnesses whose testimony showed that the defendant did the killing under circumstances that would render it justifiable or reduce it from murder to manslaughter, then the court should have charged upon the subject of justifiable homicide or manslaughter. But there is nothing in the evidence that presented the theory that the killing was justifiable or was manslaughter. The testimony of one of the State’s witnesses, that he heard Evans Pope’s voice outside of the house, saying, “These negroes have shot at me three times, and I ain’t done nothing,” which was admitted as a part of the res geste, did not require a charge upon justifiable homicide or manslaughter. The court charged the jury that “When an unauthorized killing occurs the law presumes it was done with malice, unless the proof shows a lawful killing; in the absence of all else, the law implies that it was done with malice aforethought.” Under the facts of this case, this charge is not error.
4. The court’s charge to the jury that if they believed any witness had sworn wilfully and knowingly falsely, the testimony of such witness should be disregarded, unless so corroborated by circumstances or other -evidence unimpeaehed as to be irresistible, states the rule too broadly, and it would have been more correct to have charged the language of the statute; but the charge does not require the grant of a new trial. See the cases of Ivey v. State, 23 Ga. 576; Fishel v. Lockard, 52 Ga. 633; Pierce v. State, 53 Ga. 365.
5. Nor did the court err in instructing the jury that if they were satisfied beyond a reasonable and moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was guilty of murder, they should so find, — giving them the form of verdict in that case. The evidence upon which the defendant was convicted was circumstantial, but there is no complaint that the court did not *706charge the rule of evidence which should he given, in cases based upon circumstantial evidence. It is therefore to be presumed that he did. The mere fact that ho did not charge it in connection with the charge last quoted does not render that charge erroneous.
6-8. The rulings made in headnotes 6, 7, and 8 require no elaboration.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur, except Ailcinson J., dissenting from the ruling in the flh head-note.