(After stating the foregoing facts.)
In 4 Elliott on Ev. §3041, it is said: “Evidence of previous threats of the deceased against the accused is not admissible, unless there is some proof of an attack or overt hostile act showing an intent to carry the threats into execution. It has sometimes been stated, in general terms, that evidence of threats uneommunicated to the defendant is not admissible. Thus, it has been held that threats of deceased against the accused are not admissible in evidence, until it has been proved that the accused had been advised of them. • But in these cases there was no pretense of self-defense; and it is generally held that evidence of uneommunicated threats by deceased is admissible in a proper case to show his mental attitude, and determine who was the aggressor. And in a recent case it is said that uneommunicated threats, according to the modern and better reasoned cases, are admissible in three instances, namely, to show who began the affray, to corroborate evidence of communicated threats, and to show the attitude of the deceased.” The evi
In Hall v. State, 48 Ga. 607, McCay, J., said: “The res geste of a transaction is what is done during the progress of it, or so nearly upon the actual occurrence as fairly to be treated as cotemporaneous with it. No precise point of time can be fixed a priori where the res gesta; ends. Each case turns on its own circumstances. Indeed, the inquiry is rather into events than into the precise time which has elapsed.” In the apt and often-quoted language of Chief Justice Bleckley in Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Sheppard, 85 Ga. 775, “What the law altogether distrusts it not after-speech hut after-thought.” Tested by these rules, we think that the proposed evidence was not free from the suspicion of afterthought, but rather in the nature of a narration of a past transaction, by which the accused proposed to exculpate himself, than a part of the res gestas. In Mitchum v. State, 11 Ga. 615, the accused ran from the house where the deceased was shot, a distance of thirty
Judgment reversed.