Easley v. State

175 S.E. 23, 49 Ga. App. 275, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 362
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 21, 1934
Docket23648
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 S.E. 23 (Easley 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
Easley v. State, 175 S.E. 23, 49 Ga. App. 275, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 362 (Ga. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinions

Guerry, J.

Luther Easley was indicted for the offense of assault with intent to murder, L. H. Satterfield being the victim. The defendant was convicted, and, his motion for a new trial being overruled, he excepted. The indictment charged that the defendant “did, with an automobile, assault, strike and'injure L. H. Satterfield, and did drive said automobile over, against and upon the said L. H. Satterfield, with a reckless disregard for human life and [276]*276for the life of L. H. Satterfield, which reckless disregard was the equivalent of an intent to kill and murder the said L. H. Satterfield.” The indictment further sets out that the defendant was operating said car along Marietta street in the city of Atlanta in violation of the law with reference to passing street-cars and speed. The State’s case rests mainly on the testimony of two witnesses. They are Satterfield, the prosecutor, and Carter, a street-car motorman. Satterfield was struck and run over by a car driven by the defendant. The place of the accident was at the intersection of Peachtree and Marietta streets in the city of Atlanta. His testimony shows that the defendant was driving down Marietta towards Peachtree at a rate of speed of approximately 40 miles per hour. There was a street-car coming in the same direction, and just before it came to its usual stopping place it began to slow down to take on passengers that had gathered out in the street, and the defendant, instead of bringing his car to a stop as he was required to do by an ordinance of the city of Atlanta, passed on by the streetcar, scattering the people that had gathered for the purpose of boarding the same, and drove on down to the intersection, which was only a short distance from the place where he passed the streetcar. The traffic signal was green, meaning that traffic in his direction could cross Peachtree, and, according to Satterfield, if the defendant had held a straight course on down Marietta, no accident would have happened, but instead, when he reached the intersection, he turned his car up on the curb and ran over him. Carter, the motorman of the alleged street-car, testified that the defendant passed him going about 20 or 25 miles per hour; that he had not brought his car to a complete stop when the defendant passed him, but that he was in the act of stopping. Although the prosecutor testified that the defendant was traveling around 40 miles per hour, other State witnesses reduce this to 15, 20, or 25. The prosecutor testified that if the defendant had kept a straight course no accident of any kind would have happened, and that it looked as if the defendant deliberately ran over him, while all other witnesses for the State and the defendant sustain the defendant’s defense that he was forced to turn his car to the right and up on the curb in order to avoid hitting two ladies that had stepped out in front of his car.

The intent to do an act, where no provocation or motive appears, is necessarily hard of proof and is generally only provable by cir[277]*277cumstantial evidence. There are certain circumstances involving the acts of one accused of a crime, from which men, from past human experience, infer his intent. If a person point a loaded gun at another and pull the trigger, he will be presumed to have intended to shoot that person. Sometimes the element of provocation appears to explain the act of one accused of crime. Motive, in most crimes, appears as the vehicle of intent, and where motive to do an act is proved, and that act is done, a jury would, of course, be authorized to find that the accused was moved by such motive and that it was his intent to commit the crime. In the offense of assault with intent to murder there must be malice and a specific intent to kill the person assaulted. The law does not presume an intent to kill from the unlawful use of a deadly weapon, unless death actually results; and in the latter case this is true because the law presumes that every person of rational and ordinary judgment intends the ordinary consequences of his acts. Where death does not occur, the law does not reach into the realm of speculation and presume that the defendant intended that which did not occur. It is true that from the use of a weapon likely to produce death, in a manner likely to have that result, malice will be presumed, as malice may be inferred from the infliction of the slightest injury, even though the weapon used was not one likely to produce death. However, malice, where no killing takes place, does not necessarily include an intention to kill, for any intention to inflict slight injury on another is necessarily infected with malice, but there would not be at the same time an intent to kill that person. If death had ensued and the defendant could not have been convicted of murder, then he can not be convicted of assault with intent to murder.

Aside from the elements that we have pointed out above that go to show intent to do a certain act, our courts have adopted and sanctioned the rule of law that "there are wanton or reckless states of mind which are sometimes the equivalent of a specific intention to kill, and which may and should be treated by the jury as amounting to such intention when productive of violence likely to result in the destruction of life though not so resulting in the given instance.” Gallery v. State, 92 Ga. 463 (17 S. E. 863). This principle was applied in Dennard v. State, 14 Ga. App. 485 (81 S. E. 378). The facts in that case showed that the person as[278]*278saultecl was walking along a public highway and that the defendant approached him from behind in an automobile, and that although the person assaulted was some few feet from the road, the defendant’s car turned and ran over him, inflicting severe injuries. No-provocation ox motive appeared and no reason was given why the car was turned to the side of the road, striking the prosecutor. Judge Koan said: “This is a very peculiar case. It is not shown that the defendant had any ill feeling for the man alleged to have been assaulted; no reason appears why he should have wished to run the man down on a public highway; there is no evidence that the machine became unmanageable or skidded, and no explanation of his conduct is apparent unless it was actuated by a reckless disregard for human life.” In Chambliss v. State, 37 Ga. App. 124 (139 S. E. 80), this principle was again applied where the evidence disclosed that the defendant, together with another negro man and two women, was driving a red Buick automobile at the rate of 50 or 60 miles per hour, and attempted to pass a Ford car at a wide place in the road where three or four ears could travel abreast, and, although the Ford car was as near the edge of the road as it could get, the defendant hit the Ford car, turning it over and causing injury to the occupants thereof. Luke, J., following the Dennard case, supra, said: '“There was ample evidence to authorize the jury to find that the defendant, while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, was driving his car at an unlawful rate of speed, in a reckless manner, and with utter disregard of the lives and safety of others.”

We have been extremely doubtful whether such a rule of law as announced in the Dennard case, supra, should be applied in a case where practically all the evidence shows that the accident was merely unfortunate.

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48 S.E.2d 864 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1948)
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1 S.E.2d 605 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1939)
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Bluebook (online)
175 S.E. 23, 49 Ga. App. 275, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easley-v-state-gactapp-1934.