137 Ga. 520 | Ga. | 1912
Stevens shot and killed bis wife. He was convicted of murder, moved for a new trial, and, upon tbe overruling of Ms motion, excepted.
Seduced to its finality, the question is, whether a statement by a wife to her husband that she has been guilty of adultery and an expression of an intention to see her paramour again, may suffice to reduce the killing of her by her husband to manslaughter. The Penal Code (191,0), § 65, declares: “In all cases bf voluntary manslaughter, there must be some actual assault upon the person killing, or an attempt by the person killed to commit a serious personal injury on the person killing, or other equivalent circumstances to justify the excitement of passion, and to exclude all idea of deliberation or malice, either express or implied. Provoca
It is not necessary to undertake to define accurately that express sion;.but an illustration or two may not be out of place. An attempt to commit a serious personal injury on a member of one’s family in his presence, the catching of a man in adultery with one’s wife, or a violent trespass on one’s property in his presence, and a killing then taking place, might authorize a submission to the jury of the theory of voluntary manslaughter. But mere words will not. In some cases where it may appear at first glance that words were treated as authorizing a submission of that theory, a careful consideration will show some added fact or conduct on the part of the person slain. Thus, in Golden v. State, 25 Ga. 527, 533, the deceased seized a tumbler. In Mack v. State, 63 Ga. 693, the person killed had a knife in his hand, raised above the father-in-law of the accused, whom he held by the waist. In Mize v. State, 135 Ga. 291 (69 S. E. 173), there was evidence tending to show an absence from home of a little daughter of the accused, a boastful declaration by a boy indicating that he had had illicit relations with her, when questioned by her father, the presence of the boy’s father with a gun, a firing by the accused at the boy, the presenting of a gun toward the accused by the boy’s father, and the shooting of the father by the accused. While some broad language was used in the opinion, it was not ruled that words alone can reduce murder to manslaughter.
Judgment affirmed.