William Malone, plaintiff in error, was charged with the offense of assault with intent to murder one Anthony Randall, on the twenty-first day of September, 1880, in the county of Fulton. On being arraigned and placed upon trial, he was, under the evidence and charge of the court, found guilty. He made a motion for a new trial,
(1) . Because the verdict is contrary to law.
(2) . Because the verdict is contrary to evidence and without evidence to support it.
(3) . Because the court erred in charging the jury, as follows : “ But if the proof should satisfy you that the prosecutor’s wife and the prisoner had had criminal intercourse the one with the other, and this came to the knowledge of the husband, or he had reasonable suspicion of it, and at the beginning or a previous part of such intimacy he had seen proper to condone the offense and be again friendly with the prisoner, under promise or warning that it would not again be repeated, and if, after that, the prisoner violated that obligation, or the prosecutor had reasonable cause to believe that he was violating it, or seeking to violate it, and to continue or renew such criminal intimacy, then it would be proper and right for him to warn the prisoner not to do so, and even to menace him with condign consequences if he did not desist.”
(5) . Because the court erred in charging the jury, “That if you should be satisfied that the prisoner neither had been nor really was the paramour of prosecutor’s wife, it would have to appear clearly and distinctly that there was an actual necessity for him to interfere before he would be justified in doing so, and if he did interfere without such actual necessity, the husband would have the right to defend his wife or himself against his interference, and if that interference was for the purpose of advancing criminal intimacy, to use any amount of force, even extending' to taking life itself, if the same became absolutely necessary to defend himself or to defend his wife’s virtue against such attempts.”
(6) . Because the court charged, “ If there was no real' necessity for the shooting, or if that necessity was of his own creation, either by his first attacking the prosecutor, or by his invading the prosecutor’s marital rights, then he would not be justified in shooting.”
(7) . “The jury are the exclusive judges 'of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses. The court delivers to you the law, and endeavors to deliver it to you correctly, and you can safely follow the guidance of the court when advising you touching the law.”
That paragraph imperatively declares, “ In all criminal cases the jury shall be the judges of the law and fact.”
On a careful review, therefore, of the facts in this case taken in connection with the charge of the court, we are satisfied the verdict is sustained both by the law and facts, and we see no error in the court in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Let the judgment below be affirmed.
