Prince v. State

30 Ga. 27 | Ga. | 1860

By the Court.

Stephens, J.,

delivering the opinion.

We think that the facts in this case do not constitute a riot. A riot, according to the definition in our Code, is where “ any two or more persons, either with or without a common cause of quarrel, do an unlawful act of violence, or any other act in a violent and tumultuous manner.” There must be as many as two persons, and they must do the same act. To be sure, it is not necessary that they should do the same act, in the sense that, what each ODe does, must be identical with what is done by each of the others. If so, a riot is an impossibility; for it is impossible that the action of each shall not have a certain individuality which will distinguish it from the action of all the rest. In tearing down a house, for instance, one rioter breaks down a door, and another breaks down a window, and a third merely hands a crow-bar to one of his associates. Here each one’s act is different from the acts of the others, and the act of one of them has in it nothing of violence. But there is an obvious legal sense in which they all do the same act. The common intent which covers all the individual parts in the action, cements those parts into one whole, of which each actor is a responsible proprietor. The parts performed by himself is his by perpetration, and the ;parts performed by the others in execution of the common intent, are his by adoption. The principle is, that each one adopts the performances of all the rest and adds them to his own, and thus does the whole, in the sense of the definition, so long as they are acting in execution of a common intent, but no longer. Hence, there cannot be a riot except where the acts of as many as two persons are cemented into one and the same act, by virtue of being done in the execution of a common intent. While, therefore, there may undoubtedly be a riot without a common cause of quarrel, or without any quarrel at all, there cannot be a riot without a common intent on the part of as many as two persons who do something in execution of that common intent. Now, the case before us is the simple one of two *30men fighting each other — Prince with an intent to hurt Stafford, and Stafford with an intent to hurt Prince — with intents which, so far from being the same, were precisely the opposites of each other. Prince, in making the attack, was guilty of a battery, and Stafford, in returning it with a rock, may have exceeded a lawful measure of force, and so have been guilty of a battery also; but certainly they were not acting in execution of a common intent, and so were not guilty of a riot. For myself, I think it would be a great straining of the statute to hold that even a pitched battle— a fight in pursuance of an agreement to fight — would constitute a riot. But that question is not in this case; for though there is proof of an agreement to fight, the proof is, that the fight which actually took place, was not in execution of that agreement. The agreement was, that they should go out of the incorporation and fight; but while they were going out for the purpose, Prince precipitated the fight by giving the damned lie” and striking a blow. Stafford was overtaken by a fight not in the bargain. It may be that a riot was brewing; but if so, Prince spoiled the riot by an assault and battery. This view covers all the grounds of error.

Judgment reversed.

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