Jones v. State

29 Ga. 594
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 29 Ga. 594 (Jones 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
Jones v. State, 29 Ga. 594 (Ga. 1860).

Opinion

— Stephens J.

By the Court.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] This was an indictment for murder. The killing was admitted upon the trial, and the defence turned wholly upon the grading of the homicide. The Judge was asked by the defence to charge the jury, “ that the existence of malice is not presumable in this case, if on any rational theory consistent with all the evidence, the killing was either justifiable or excusable, or an act of manslaughter.” The equivalent of this proposition, in simple terms, is that the jury should not grade the killing as murder, if the evidence would justify them in grading it either as justifiable homicide or as manslaughter.

The charge thus stated becomes a truism in criminal law, and we think was improperly refused. The Judge says, that the grade of justifiable homicide was not presented as an issue by the argument. If this remark be an intimation that the issue ivas not properly presented, it is sufficient to reply, that it was as competent to present it by asking a charge, as by making a speech, and the very request under consideration does present the issue. The Judge refused to let that issue go to the jury, because in his opinion there was no evidence which could support it. His opinion that the evidence could not support the supposition- of manslaughter, if he had happened to have that opinion, would have been equally potent to exclude that grade also from the consideration of the jury. His opinion, then, if such had been his opinion, that there ivas no evidence which could possibly justify or mitigate the killing, would have been sufficient foundation for a judgment of murder by the Court, without the intervention of a jury. The homicide being admitted, there were but three possible conclusions in the case: murder, manslaughter, or justifiable homicide; and the exclusion of any two of the three, would necessarily have been an [605]*605adoption of the third. The Judge held, that his opinion was competent to exclude one of the three conclusions of law; if so his opinion, if he had happened to have that opinion, would have been equally competent to exclude two; and the exclusion of two, would have been the adoption of the third, and a settlement of the whole business by himself.

He had no use for a jury on the issue of justifiable homicide, because, in his opinion, there was no evidence which showed a justification; and if he had happened to be further of the opinion, that there was no evidence which showed a mitigation, he could not have had any use for a jury on the issue of manslaughter.

The remaining conclusion of murder, would have been as certain as that one remains after taking two from three; and he could have had no more use for a jury in arriving at it, than he would have had for a jury to assist him in deciding a motion for a nonsuit. Would this be allowing the jury to judge of the law and the fact ? It would be to obliterate the line of demarkation between the province of the Judge and the province of the jury in criminal cases, and to unite them both in the person of the Judge. To judge of the law and the fact, in a criminal case, is to determine from the evidence what acts were done, and with what intentions, and then to decide what crime they constitute, or whether they constitute any crime at all. In this case the Judge allowed the jury to decide what crime, but refused to allow them to consider whether there might be no crime. They were entitled to decide all the law of the case, but they were precluded from deciding a very important part of it. In the case of Holden vs. The State, 5 Ga. Rep. p. 445, this Court, consisting at that time of its first three Judges, said: £iIn short, the Court in the full exercise of its own functions, must still obey the behest of the statute, and concede to the jury the exercise of their judgment on all the law of the case

In an accusation of murder, where, as in this case, the defence turns upon the grading of the homicide, in order that [606]*606the jury may exercise their judgment on all the law-; of- the •case, all of the grades put in issue, either by the’argument or ■the requested charges, ought to be submitted to'their decision, along with proper 'instructions as what Constitutes - each ¡ grade.

The Judge instructs, but the jury decides. • Eveaynperson accused of crime is entitled to have the-decisión of a jury, upon any defence of law which lie may chdose to rest upon the facts in evidence. Courts may-distrust juries^ but the -Legislature'coufided iii -them." ■ - ■ : ■' •

[2.] -In grading this- homicide, what instructions. Ought to have been given to the jury concerning the drunkenness of the accused? This Court, approving of the Judge’s' refusal. ; to give-the instructions “asked bythe defence,-thinks-that other important -instructions not given; would have been- appro- ; priate to the-facts -in evidence. ■ T shall point out ‘what we -•think would have been the proper instructions, but shall first ,present those! views-of the general subject whichleadmy own .' -mind to the conclusions at which the Court, arrived! ■

Oncside in the. argumeut affirms as a grea-t principle, that ' no man, drunk or sober, should be punished for a crime which he did not have sufficient mind to-perpetrate; and the other replies, with an equally important principle, that drunkenness is no excuse for crime. The two sides,-each relying upon -its chosen principle, have arrived at singularly conflicting conclusions. The truth is, that both these principles are correct, and constitute with the just deductions-from them, but parts of an harmonious whole, sustained by law. and sanctioned by reason. '

The error which the side of the accused commits, lies in assuming too large a quantum: of mind as the minimum which can fnrnish the necessary mental element in all crime —in erecting too high a- standard.of mental capacity. Different classes of crimes do involve different degrees-of mind, and in alt-classes there may arise particular instances which, in the mode and circumstances of.their perpetration, may in[607]*607vüíve^eVeÜ á'íügh’clégrée. of scientific knowledge. ^Siit'sub‘"’j'eíctfttí this'jjuhlifieá'tiori of the general tryíthj, th^'gerieraí'truth ’ itself Is, thát fbe hiifiiirium' of mind which can furnish? the 'necessary mental element in crime, is. a far smaller quantity ‘thárUHv'cfe cláiriied by'the argument* fori the áccüriéá.‘>'"’^,he ’’■aYgUrnent,'rightfully assuming that' there cari he .no murder iVithburthe'friérital eletíiferit" of malice, proceeded*Uo'claim, A Jli.-A.-'-' >*_____WlSj!}' ''hierifeion¥ dffthaf • irialfcri riiliich' enters* into ’the'constitution ‘of murder.' 1 he popular mea. of malice in its sense of re-J Vehgej° h&tred.' Hnéf'^ll will, has nothing to cío’ with .’the* subject! 0 AriWmfeef"o'f cases might’be given td' shovy the jdiffer- ■ ericd beWderi fhripbpiilar idea, áhd'that malice whieh 'forms *;'á'heeésisárjí p'ar’t of the legal crime of'murder .......

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Bluebook (online)
29 Ga. 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-state-ga-1860.