Batchelor v. State

132 S.E. 624, 162 Ga. 7, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 9, 1926
DocketNo. 5171
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 624 (Batchelor v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Batchelor v. State, 132 S.E. 624, 162 Ga. 7, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 99 (Ga. 1926).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.

J. D. Batchelor was convicted of murder, and the death penalty was imposed. His motion for a new trial was overruled, and he excepted. The person slain was Mrs. Fannie Anderson, the mother of defendant's wife. Mrs. Anderson-lived with her husband at their home in Jones County, where the defendant with his wife and children had been 'staying for some time. The defendant left the Anderson home the day before the homicide, and went to Macon. He returned to the Anderson home early the next morning, and the homicide occurred there almost immediately after his arrival. Two shots were fired from a pistol in the hands of the defendant, one taking effect in the side of the mouth and ranging through the head of Mrs. Anderson and one entering one of her heels and ranging upwards to the knee. She died from the wounds. The only eye-witness who testified at the trial was Myrtle, the nine-year-old daughter of the defendant. This child continued to live with her mother and grandfather in the Anderson home after the homicide until the trial. The mother of the child — defendant's wife and daughter of Mrs. Anderson — was present and saw the homicide, but did not attend the trial, because it was not her desire to do so. The child in giving an account of the homicide testified, in substance: Some time after seven o'clock in the morning she and her mother and Mrs. Anderson were sitting on the porch at the Anderson home, and saw the defendant approach, walking in a natural gait. When he reached the steps he asked Mrs. Anderson, with a smile on his face, where was Mr. Anderson. She replied that he was down in the field. Defendant then told witness to go after him. Mrs. Anderson replied that [9]*9witness did not know where to find him, and that if defendant wished to see him he would have to go himself. Mrs. Anderson then got up from the chair in which she had been sitting, and walked a few steps to a post on the porch. While thus standing-on the porch and facing the defendant, who was standing on the ground by the steps, he drew a pistol from his bosom and shot her. She staggered first forward, and then fell backward to the floor, flat on her back, and did not speak after being shot. Immediately after this shot witness’s mother 'sprang to her father, who was still on the ground, and put her hand on his shoulder; and he fired a second shot, shooting over her shoulder. The first ball entered Mrs. Anderson’s face and passed through her head into the wall; the other struck the floor and passed into her leg, where it remained.

Another witness testified, that, shortly after six o’clock on the morning of the homicide, the defendant, being in Macon, asked witness what time the train would leave for the station at which the Andersons lived, and for the loan of a dollar, and exhibited a pistol, and stated: “ T want to borrow a dollar from you to go down on,’ and said, T am going to kill that--old - [woman], and I am going to kill the rest of them as I come to them.’ . . He didn’t call the names of any of the parties. I didn’t know only it was his wife’s mother: He said his wife’s mother and people were trying to separate him and his wife. He says, Tf I can’t live with my wife, no one else shall. I will kill the--old--first, then I will get the rest of them as I come to them.’ ”

The defendant made a statement before the jury, in which he detailed his previous manner of living and how he had supported his family and aided others, but had finally through misfortune been driven to the necessity of moving with his family temporarily to the Anderson home; that he had been driven from that home by Mr. and Mrs. Anderson, but was finally allowed to spend the night; that on the day before the homicide he left the home for Macon in search of work; that he found work and a place to bring his family to live; that on the morning of the homicide he returned to the Anderson home for his wife and children, and on being again ordered away and threatened to be killed by Mrs. Anderson, he stated to her: “ No, you won’t; before I will be separated [10]*10from my wife and baby any longer . . I would prefer to blow my own brains out.’ At that time I reached for my gun. It was in my bosom. I reached for my pistol, and my wife grabbed me, and as she grabbed me the pistol first went this way towards her; that is the way she pulled it. I had to use all the precaution in. the world to keep that gun from killing my wife. . . I twisted the gun back this way, and that is the time the gun went off over her shoulder, and as it went off over [her] shoulder I got the gun back down. I couldn’t turn it loose and couldn’t give it to her. If I could have given it to her I would have done it; but I couldn’t, the way she was wrestling; and as I got it down, that is when the shot was fired and hit the porch. At that time I had broke my hold from hers, and I give her the gun. In the meantime I hadn’t seen my mother-in-law from the time the scuffle first started. We were in the yard, I and my wife. I hadn’t seen my mother-in-law from the time the scuffle first started until that second shot was fired; and after the second shot was fired, my wife, —I had already given her the gun, and after I had given her the gun I looked and saw my mother-in-law lying on the porch. . . I couldn’t swear and. tell the truth [whether] I pulled the trigger or my wife pulled it, but it was an accident any way you want to take it, if it had been her or me; it is an accident, and I had rather it have been me any time than her.” The statement then proceeded, referred to other matters, and declared that there was no intention upon the part of the defendant to commit the homicide.

The foregoing statement does not set out all of the evidence or all of the prisoner’s statement before the jury, but it contains a sufficiency of both to enable the court to deal properly with the grounds of the motion for new trial. The first special ground alleges that the court erred in failing to charge the law of involuntary manslaughter as contained in § 67 of the Penal Code: “Involuntary manslaughter shall consist in the killing of a human being without any intention to do so, but in the commission of an unlawful act.” In this ground it is stated: “The jury would have been authorized to believe that while the defendant did not intentionally and with malice aforethought kill the deceased, the killing was the direct consequence and result of the commission of an unlawful act, to wit, carrying a concealed pistol, at the time of [11]*11the homicide. The evidence and the defendant’s statement did not, as movant contends, demand the conclusion that the killing was deliberate and with malice aforethought.” There was no appropriate written request to charge upon this subject, and consequently it would not be error to fail to charge upon the subject on account of any statements made not under oath by the defendant to the jury. The only evidence by an eye-witness to the homicide was the testimony of the defendant’s child, Myrtle. That evidence tended to show an intentional killing by shooting the pistol after the defendant had drawn it from its place of concealment in his bosom, and was insufficient to require a charge upon the law of involuntary manslaughter.

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Related

Coleman v. State
67 S.E.2d 578 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.E. 624, 162 Ga. 7, 1926 Ga. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batchelor-v-state-ga-1926.