109 Ga. 489 | Ga. | 1900
Tripp and another presented a petition to the judge of the superior court, for certiorari, which was sanctioned; and it appeared by the answer of the judge of the county court, that Henry Tripp and Albert Tripp were indicted in the superior court of Morgan county for the offense of riot; that the same was transferred to the county court where the defendants were tried. The bill of indictment charged the defendants with committing “an act of a violent and tumultuous manner,” by riding by the dwelling-house of L. T. Osborn and firing off pistols and shooting into a tenement-house of said Osborn. The evidence tended to show that the defendants were in a buggy traveling the public road in front of the house of Osborn; that Mrs. Osborn was standing in the porch of her residence, when the two defendants drove rapidly by; that two children were in the road, and Mrs. Osborn found it necessary to call
The act charged in this case is the rapid driving on the public road and the firing of the pistol. The evidence show's that the horse which was being driven went as fast as he could trot. This is not itself unlawful, nor an act of violence, nor necessarily an act done in a tumultuous mannei’. If it be said that coupled with such driving was the firing of the pistol, the reply is that the evidence in no way connects the driver with the discharges of the pistol, and there is nothing in the evidence rvhich tends to show that the firing was done in pursuance of a common intent. While we are prepared to condemn such conduct in the most emphatic terms, we can not, as a matter of
Judgment reversed.