Crawley v. State

74 S.E. 537, 137 Ga. 777, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 146
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 74 S.E. 537 (Crawley 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
Crawley v. State, 74 S.E. 537, 137 Ga. 777, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 146 (Ga. 1912).

Opinion

Beck, J.

Jim Crawley was jointly indicted with Reginald Crawley and Stiles Mitchell for the murder of William Carden. The three defendants were tried together, and Stiles Mitchell and Reginald Crawley were acquitted. Jim Crawley was convicted, the jury recommending that he be imprisoned in the penitentiary for life. A motion for a new trial was filed by Jim Crawley, and upon the hearing it was overruled. The only eye-witnesses to the killing, who were near enough to see and hear all that occurred, were the. three defendants named in the indictment. Each of these made a statement tending to show that at the time of the shooting the decedent was attempting to feloniously attack-one of the three defendants, who were riding together in a buggy, with intent to shoot and kill one or both of the Crawleys, who are brothers.

1. The court properly permitted counsel for the State to introduce evidence tending to develop before the jury the question as to whether the slain man was a man of a peaceable or a violent disposition and character. The privilege of showing the character of the deceased in the first, instance was the prerogative of the defendant alone. But the defense had shown, before the State attempted to introduce such evidence, that the deceased had made numerous threats against the life of the accused; and the accused in his statement declared that the decedent was-a dangerous man, “and I knew he would shoot me the first chance he got. . . He had threatened to do it so many times to so many people who had told [779]*779me, lots of them. I could take hours of your time and give you the names and what he told them. . . Now, going back to the time when Mr. Carden shot and killed my brother, I want to say he has hounded me around and made these threats, which have come to me from all directions, that he was going to kill me.” Then follows, in the statement of the prisoner, a further enumeration of instances when he was waylaid by Carden and his footsteps were pursued; instances showing that Carden was a man of violent character, and relentless in his determination to finally take advantage of a fitting opportunity for the purpose of slaying the accused. Witnesses had been introduced before this statement was made, who gave testimony corroborating the prisoner’s statement in regard to the making of threats against the life of the accused. In no other way could the defense have more effectually put the character of the decedent in issue. It has been held that the defendant can put his own character in issue by his statement alone (Jackson v. State, 76 Ga. 552); and if he can put his own character in issue merely by his statement, it would seem that he could put that of the slain man in issue. But the defense did not limit the attack upon the character of the deceased to the defendant’s statement. There was proof of circumstances tending to show that Carden was a man of violent character. “Where the defendant has offered evidence of threats against himself made by the deceased, the prosecution has been permitted to introduce evidence of the good character of the latter.” 3 Ene. Ev. 14, and cit. After the defense had thus distinctly put the character of the slain man in issue, and had introduced, for the consideration of the jury, testimony which tended to demonstrate that the deceased was a man of' violent character, in the interest of truth and for the purpose of aiding the jury in their efforts to reach a correct conclusion as to this material issue the court properly refused to exclude evidence offered to show that the deceased was a man of an entirely different character from that portrayed in the statement of the accused and by his witnesses.

2. Movant insists that the court erred in charging the jury as follows: “Proof of the violent and turbulent character of the deceased is admissible only when it is shown prima facie that the deceased was the assailant, that the accused had been assailed, and that the defendant or defendants was honestly seeking to defend himself or themselves. But if you find from the evidence that the [780]*780defendants were the aggressors, and that the defendants overtook the deceased, and one of them began or entered into a difficulty with the deceased with a preconceived intent of having a difficulty, or began the attack without provocation from the deceased, if he was a bad character, then the bad character of the deceased would not offer the defendant any excuse for taking his life, if" he or they took his life; for it is the same offense to kill a bad person as it is to kill a good person.” We see no error in. this charge. It states the law, and the evidence authorized it. There was evidence to authorize the jury to find that Carden was walking peaceably along the public highway, with his coat on his arm, with his back towards the three men approaching him in a buggy, that he was shot in the back of the head; and the prisoner himself stated that when the buggy-was within 20 or 25 yards of Carden he recognized Carden. “Of course I thought of the threats he had made towards me.” And while this statement, that he thought of the threats, is connected with other statements in which the accused disclaimed any evil intention, the jury were authorized to believe the .part that was unfavorable and to disbelieve the other part. They.were authorized to believe that, considering his position and the relative position of the three men, the single man would not have been the aggressor against the three. And further, thej'' were authorized to find the existence in the breast of the accused of bitter enmity against the man who was slain. For when the latter was found, he was found dead, with a wound in the back'of the head and three wounds in his breast.

3. Exception is taken to the following, charge of the court: “If you believe from the evidence that the deceased made a violent assault upon the defendants, such an assault as I have heretofore described, and that at the time the circumstances, as they appeared to him, were sufficient to excite the fears of a reasonable man that his own life and person and that the life and person of his brother were in danger, and he acted under the excitement of such fear and not in a spirit of revenge, -and if you believe that the defendant had the right to shoot to save his own life or that of his brother, if you believe this is the truth of the case, you would be authorized to acquit the defendant.” The exception is “on the ground, that, this being the summing up of the whole charge by the court, it tended to limit and explain the former parts of his charge that [781]

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.E. 537, 137 Ga. 777, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawley-v-state-ga-1912.