159 Ga. 787 | Ga. | 1925
Lead Opinion
K. S. Whitaker was tried under an indictment charging him and one Allen with the offense of murder, it being alleged that the two defendants unlawfully and with malice shot and killed one 0. C. Harwood. The jury trying the case returned a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted.
The rulings made in headnotes one to four, inclusive, require no elaboration.
Several grounds of the motion for new trial contain assignments of error upon portions of the court’s charge relating to a conspiracy between the accused and other parties, some of whom are not named in the indictment, and it is insisted that all of those portions of the charge based upon the theory that there was a conspiracy or common felonious intent upon the part of the accused and'other parties to kill Harwood, the named decedent, were error. In some of the exceptions to these portions of the charge it is urged
Ed. Harwood, a brother of the decedent, testified for the State: Whitaker and Allen and one other came to the sawmill on the day of the killing; they had been drinking to some extent. Allen said they had some whisky stolen and were trying to locate it, and claimed that the decedent and his brother and some colored boys got it. They stayed at the mill until quitting time, about seven o’clock, and left the mill in the company of the mill employees.
Emanuel Banks, a witness for the State, testified that when he and the other sawmill employees quit work for the day they went by a shack, but that Whi'taker went ahead, and later they met him and Heath in an automobile. They both got out of the automobile^ and Heath asked what was the matter, and Allen said, “We want to know who stole the whisky, Mr. Harwood or them boys.” Heath pulled off his coat and asked the decedent if he wanted to fight, and the decedent said nothing. Then the shooting took place. Witness did not know who shot the first, or second, or third time.
We think, when all of these facts are considered together, the question of the existence or non-existence of a conspiracy was made, and it was exclusively within the province of the jury to decide it. It is unnecessary for us to argue the question made by the evidence, but one or two features of it may well be pointed out to show that the judge was authorized to charge on the subject of a conspiracy. In the first place, the accused, with two other persons, went to the place where the decedent and certain employees of the mill were at work. The deceased was there and his brother and several employees. The defendant, after starting back with the men who were at the mill, separated from them and 'said he would go back by another road. He did go off by another road, but he returned in an automobile with a companion sitting by him on
Exception is taken, in one of the grounds of the motion for new trial, to the failure of the court to charge upon the subject of voluntary manslaughter. We express no opinion as to the strength or weight of the evidence in the record which introduces the element of voluntary manslaughter into the case. We merely rule that there was some evidence authorizing the jury to consider whether the defendant was guilty of the offense of voluntary manslaughter. Where there is any evidence at all tending tg show that the homicide was not murder but voluntary manslaughter, the law upon that subject should be given, and a' failure to give it is error. We have already set out above the substance of the evidence tending to show the circumstances under which the deceased and his companions came in contact with the accused and his companions. The theory of the State was that the accused, or the accused and his companions, or one of those with whom he was acting in concert, without justification and without provocation that would justify an attack with a deadly weapon or palliate the deadly assault, commenced firing upon the deceased. But one of the witnesses for the State, Emanuel Banks, testified in part, as follows: “When I was down there at the sawmill I didn’t see Mr. Allen with a gun. Mr. Buchanan had. a 20-gauge pump shotgun. Mr. O. C. Harwood [the decedent] had an automatic gun. Mr. Ed. Iiarwood didn’t have any. I didn’t see Mr. Ed. Harwood shoot any that night. Yes, sir, they talked awhile at the sawmill; all three of them talked to Mr. Harwood. Mr. Harwood came up the road, and Mr. Ed. and Mr. Allen and Mr. Buchanan. No, sir.
The evidence in this record does not very clearly set forth tbe circumstances attending the homicide. The evidence is brief, and leaves the exact status and relation of the parties in doubt. But where there is enough evidence to authorize the jury to find that a homicide took place without any mixture of deliberation whatever, but upon a sudden heat of passion, there being circumstances adequate to the provocation of such passion, a charge upon the subject of voluntary manslaughter should be given. For if, upon a sudden quarrel, the parties fight upon the spot and one of them is killed, and there is evidence to show that the killing' was under the circumstances last indicated, then a charge upon the subject of voluntary manslaughter should be given.
The law of justifiable homicide was not involved, in this case, either under the evidence for the State or the accused, or under the statement of the defendant; and the assignment of error upon the court’s failure to charge upon that subject is ‘without merit.
Judgment reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment of reversal upon the ground that the law of voluntary manslaughter should have been given in charge; but I am also of the opinion that the slight circumstances introduced in proof were wholly insufficient to raise any inference of any previous conference or conspiracy between the several persons who engaged in firing upon the deceased. In my opinion, therefore, it was error to instruct the jury upon the subject of conspiracy at all.
Dissenting Opinion
dissent on the ground that voluntary manslaughter is not involved under the evidence, and that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.