186 Ga. 863 | Ga. | 1938
Wilson Wright was indicted and convicted of the offense of murder. His motion for new trial was overruled, and he excepted.
The admissions attributed to the defendant, briefly stated, were as follows: On the morning of the killing, Wright, the defendant on trial, met Anderson, his alleged confederate, who invited Wright to go with him, saying they were going to get something. Wright went, and when they reached the store of Center, the deceased, Anderson walked around the front of the store, and Wright stood by the drug-store window next door. They then planned to go into Center’s store to rob him. Anderson was to grab Center and hold him, and the defendant was to take and fill up suit-cases with “stuff” out of the store. When Center turned his back Anderson grabbed him. They tussled and fell to the floor. Anderson held Center on the floor while the defendant packed merchandise into two suit-cases, took a box containing pants off the counter, and put this box with the suit-cases. Anderson took Center’s keys from him and handed them to Wright. Wright took the keys, unlocked the big door to the safe, and tried to unlock the inner door, but could not; whereupon he hid the keys under some boxes on the counter. Anderson then pulled a pistol from his bosom, and while holding Center on the floor struck him on the head with it. The defendant saw Anderson hit Center one time. Anderson then took Center by the shoulders, and the, defendant took his feet and they both dragged him behind the counter. Center was unconscious. Anderson took the box of pants and one of the suit-cases, and the defendant took the other suit-case, and they left the store, carrying their loot to a negro house. Later the defendant pawned one of the suit-cases with its contents for four dollars which he divided with Anderson. The two then separated, but met again about five o’clock Saturday afternoon, when Anderson gave the. defendant the pistol with which Center had been struck, to be pawned. Anderson waited on the outside while the defendant went into the pawnshop and pawned the pistol for four dollars. The defendant gave Anderson the four dollars, and Anderson gave him twenty-five cents. According to Wright’s statement, while the two were in Center’s store Anderson took the
The substance of these admissions was that the defendant and Anderson entered into-a deliberate plan to rob Center; that immediately thereafter they put this plan into execution by entering Center’s store, each carrying out his part of the unlawful enterprise, as agreed; that in the progress of the unlawful project a deadly assault was made upon Center by Anderson in the defendant’s presence, while, as might have been anticipated, Center was resisting the attempt to rob him; that after Center had been rendered unconscious by this assault, the defendant aided in dragging him behind the counter, where he was left with wounds which proved mortal; that the defendant and Anderson left the store with their loot, a portion of which the defendant later pawned; and that the sole purpose of the defendant and Anderson was to go to Center’s store and rob him. Based on the foregoing, the judge did not err in charging the jury on the law of confessions. “A confession is a voluntary statement made by a person charged with the commission of a crime, wherein he acknowledges himself to be guilty of the offense charged.” Owens v. State, 120 Ga. 296 (2) (48 S. E. 21). TJnder that ruling, the admissions of the defendant amounted to a plenary confession. They were .tantamount to a confession of guilt of the offense of murder. While the defendant said that the crime of robbery only was contemplated in the original plan, still it was not necessary, in order for the defendant to be guilty of murder, that this latter offense should have been a part of the original plan. Under the defendant’s admission, robbery was the initial purpose of the unlawful enterprise; and the homicide of the person sought to be robbed was a probable consequence of the execution of the original plan, and all participants in the robbery resulting in the homicide were guilty of murder. In Gore v. State, 162 Ga. 267 (134 S. E. 36), this court held: “Where three persons conspire to rob a merchant in his store, and one of the conspirators remains in an automobile in front of the store, with the engine running, in order that the three may speedily escape from the scene of the robbery, while the other two enter the store, and, in furtherance of the common design to rob, kill the merchant intended to be robbed, such
The Powers decision, 172 Ga. 1 (157 S. E. 195), is not authority for the proposition that a confession was not made in the instant case. In the Powers case the defendant’s statements amounted only to incriminatory admissions as to a series of circumstances from which an inference of her guilt might be deduced, to wit: (1) The defendant put in the paper an advertisement for a chauffeur for an old lady, etc. (2) Manchester, the principal, applied for the position, and she gave him a room. (3) The boy Parks (the deceased) was there, and she had an insurance policy on his life for about $3000. (4) She told Manchester, the principal defendant, about it, and Manchester said he was broke and would knock him off for a thousand dollars. (5) “She did not say whether or not she promised Manchester a thousand dollars if he did that night.” (6) She said Manchester went out with Parks about 9 :30, and Manchester returned about 11:30 and said,
A pistol, such as is here shown, used as a bludgeon upon a man’s head with such force as to fracture his skull, render him unconscious and kill him, must of necessity, when so used, be a weapon likely to produce death. Abundant proof of the deadly character of the weapon used is found in the nature of the wounds inflicted, in their immediate effect upon the person assaulted, and in the fact that death resulted from the assault within a few minutes. If this pistol in the manner in which it was used on the occasion in question was a weapon likely to produce death, the law from the use of such weapon in that manner presumes malice and intent to kill. Flannigan v. State, 135 Ga. 221 (4) (69 S. E. 171); Gallery v. State, 92 Ga. 463 (17 S. E. 863). Compare Dorsey v. State, 126 Ga. 633 (55 S. E. 479). The defendant’s admissions show that, with him present aiding and abetting, an assault with a deadly weapon resulting in death was made upon the deceased by Anderson his confederate. The blows of Anderson were the blows of Wright, and he, like Anderson, is chargeable with their natural result. The defendant admitted his participa
There was sufficient corroboration of the confession. The evidence supported the verdict, which received the approval of the trial judge. The grounds of the motion show no reason for granting a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.