Booker v. State

85 S.E. 255, 16 Ga. App. 280, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 585
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 4, 1915
Docket6295
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 255 (Booker v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Booker v. State, 85 S.E. 255, 16 Ga. App. 280, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 585 (Ga. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Wade, J.

The first and second groilnds of the amendment to the motion for a new trial complain that the court erred in giving-in charge to the jury section 65 of the Penal Code, relative to voluntary manslaughter (except the part relating to provocation bywords, threats, menaces, etc.,, which was omitted), and in instructing them what the form of their verdict should be if they found the defendant guilty of manslaughter; the alleged error being that the evidence as a whole did not warrant any reference whatever to the law of voluntary manslaughter.

The killing occurred on Sunday at a negro camp-ground, where, one witness declares, there were present more than a thousand people. Making due allowance for exaggeration, it is evident there were a large number of negroes at this meeting, some drawn there no doubt, by religious fervor, some by their gr'egarious instincts alone, and still others by the opportunities always afforded, at such gatherings to stir up trouble, settle old grudges, and render themselves, by noise and swagger, or even by violence and brutality, not only detestable to every law-abiding person present, but heroic and admirable in the opinion of the large and ignorant majority. Among others who, like Satan, “came also among them” (Job, 1, 6) were the slayer and his victim; and from some of the testimony, as well as from the statement of the accused, it appears they were both charged with satanic impulses when they arrived .on the scene; for it is evident, from the statement of the accused, that he had with sufficient cause cherished a grudge against the deceased for about two years; and, from the conduct of the deceased as depicted by some of the witnesses, it may be inferred that he was filled to overflowing with black rage against the defendant, even before they encountered each other on this day so fatal to him. One of the witnesses for the State (who testified that he was a trustee of the church where the homicide occurred, and wás an “officer” and “marshal” there on tbit day) stated that he saw the defendant a few minutes before the shooting, and that he was down at the “preacher’s tent,” and left Will Hall, the deceased, “down [282]*282there talking to the presiding elder and the bishop,” and that, soon after, Hall came out and passed by the witness, and a few minutes later the fatal encounter occurred. To reconcile the conference between the deceased and his bishop and the presiding elder in the “preacher’s tent” with the violent language and conduct ascribed to him by some of the witnesses so short a time thereafter is a task too difficult for the Caucasian mind. Out of the great number of those present many, doubtless, witnessed some part of the tragedy which marked that day in the way in which unfortunately so many religious gatherings of people of their race are distinguished, and at the trial many witnesses testified to what they saw or failed to see, so that the evidence as a whole is on some points confusion worse confounded. Without attempting to review even briefly the conflicting statements as to the fatal encounter, it is enough to say that there was testimony in behalf of the State from which the jury could have legitimately inferred that the deceased was walking away from the accfised at the time of the shooting, and was making no effort whatever to inflict upon him any serious bodily injury, much less to commit a felony upon his person. On the other hand, there was some testimony which tended to justify the defendant altogether, and some which tended to show that the slayer and his victim engaged in mutual combat, urged thereto by a sudden and violent impulse of passion, and that the killing was free from any mixture of deliberation whatever.

The testimony of a witness for the defense showed that the deceased came up to the defendant, abused and cursed him, and told him that he (the defendant) had a pistol “but was afraid to use it;” and when the defendant replied that he was not afraid to use it, “they both started for their pistols, and Eob [the defendant] got his out first and shot him.” The deceased “never did get his out until after Eob had done shot him, and after he shot him he had it in his hand.” This witness further stated that both started to get their pistols out, but the defendant got his first, as he had his coat on his arm “and brought his pistol out from under his arm;” that the shirt of the deceased was open in front, and his pistol “was down in his shirt bosom,” as she saw the handle, and it- appeared as if he “got his hand hung,” and therefore he did not get his weapon out as quickly as the defendant, but “he had it in his hand when he fell.” There was testimony from other witnesses [283]*283for the defense which tended to corroborate this statement, and more than one testified that the deceased partially turned as the defendant fired, and this accounted for the fact that the ball from the defendant’s pistol entered the back of the deceased near his backbone. Another witness said that when the shooting occurred the two parties were standing face to face, and that the deceased was shot in the back beca,use "when Eob raised his pistol he [the deceased] whirled.” Several of the witnesses corroborated the statement already referred to, that at the time the defendant shot Hall, Hall was trying to get his pistol out, and that the defendant, as they expressed it, simply "beat him to it.” This testimony, narrated above, might rather indicate that the defendant shot to prevent the deceased from taking his life, and in so doing was acting under the fears of a reasonable man; but according to some of the evidence, immediately after the shooting, the defendant, in response to an inquiry why he had killed the deceased, said: “I got tired of that man running over me. He has been running over me for three years, and I got tired of it.” And from the abuse which several witnesses say the deceased heaped upon the head of the defendant, coupled with the taunts which reflected upon his personal courage, it may be readily determined not only that the defendant intended to engage in a combat with the deceased, but also that this abuse excited his passion to the point where it became irresistible and absolutely controlled his conduct. The defendant, in his statement at the trial, recounted one gun fight and several other clashes between himself and the deceased, and told how the deceased had cursed, abused, and threatened him more than once, and had only a short time before the killing (apparently earlier in the same day) "fussed” with the defendant’s wife and “stepped on her foot;” and he further asserted that the deceased, at the time of the killing, advanced upon him, and he retreated and admonished the deceased "'to stand back and talk to” him; that the deceased said, “You got a pistol, aint you? . . I don’t care if you have, you God damned son of a bitch, all you' good for is to tell a lot of God damned Ties,” and ran his hand into his bosom, trying to get his pistol; whereupon the defendant pulled a pistol from under his coat, which he had on his arm, and fired.

The action of the deceased on the occasion of the homicide, in putting his hand on his pistol in his bosom, taken in connection [284]*284with his abusive language and his attitude towards the defendant at that time, though not sufficient to justify the homicide, might be regarded as an invitation to the defendant to engage in a combat with deadly weapons, and thereby render the homicide manslaughter. In the case of Young v. State, 10 Ga. App. 116 (72 S. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 255, 16 Ga. App. 280, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booker-v-state-gactapp-1915.