Knight v. State.

76 S.E. 1047, 12 Ga. App. 111, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 452
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 22, 1913
Docket4181
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 76 S.E. 1047 (Knight 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
Knight v. State., 76 S.E. 1047, 12 Ga. App. 111, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 452 (Ga. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Russell, J.

The plaintiff in error was indicted for murder and was convicted of voluntary manslaughter. The present writ of error challenges the judgment refusing a new trial. It is uncontradicted in the evidence that the deceased (who was the brother of the accused) came to his death as a result of a gunshot wound inflicted by the accused. Only one witness testified for the State, and the accused rested his defense upon his own statement. According to the testimony of the State’s witness, he heard the report of a gun and went to the house where these two brothers lived with their sister. He found the wounded brother upon a bed, suffering intense pain from a gunshot wound in the thigh. The defendant and the sister were present in the house. The wounded man was apparently in a djdng condition when the witness reached the house, though he seemed to be perfectly rational. It was about an hour after the witness heard the.gun fire before he went to the house. The wounded man told him, soon after he reached the house, that the wound was going to kill him; and, about an hour before his death, repeating that he was going to die, he made to the witness a statement which was submitted by the court to the jury. According to this statement of the deceased, the defendant cursed him and applied to-him unmentionable opprobrious epithets, and he slapped the defendant, and told him that nó man could speak in that way of his dead mother; the defendant got his pistol and [113]*113tried to “come on” the deceased with it, but the deceased took the pistol away from the defendant and threw him down on the floor, and hid the pistol between the mattresses on the bed; the defendant then got a shot-gun, and the deceased tried to dodge into the room, and, as he dodged, the defendant fired the fatal shot; he was shot at the door of one of the front rooms, and fell in through that door; the defendant was standing just inside of the other front room, the house being a “double-pen house,” with two sheds on the back and with a little veranda - (or open hallway) between. The deceased told the witness that he hid the pistol before he was shot and immediately after he took it away from the defendant, and the witness testified that he found the pistol where the deceased told him he had hidden it. The defendant came into the room where the witness and the wounded man were; he seemed to be very mad, and cursed the deceased several times. The defendant said to the witness: “I have been telling him to let me alone,” and to his brother he said: “You have been bothering me so long. I have been telling you to let me alone. You have been bothering me. .There is three or four more damned sons of bitches I am going to do the same way.” The deceased did not tell the witness he was ' making a statement in contemplation of death, but he more than once told the witness that he was going to die. This, witness further testified that the defendant was an exceedingly hard drinker and had been drinking for some years, and that when in a drinking condition “he seemed to have a pick at his brother and at his family;” that the defendant' was drinking at the time of the difficulty, but was not as drunk as the witness had seen him; he was '“very seldom with liquor out of him.”

According to the statement of the accused, he had had serious domestic troubles, and was separated from his wife and children, and, on account' of this, had been a very hard drinker. He was drinking all he could get the day of the difficulty, though he was running his mill that day. According to his statement, he left the mill about one o’clock, and at the dinner table found his brother (the deceased) who had been plowing, and inquired of him what sort of plowing he had been doing and how the plow worked, and suggested that he quit plowing and lay-by the corn; whereupon his brother began to quarrel and curse. The defendant stated, that he left several times to keep from having trouble with [114]*114the deceased; that the deceased followed him out of the room in which they were eating, into another room, where the defendant had gone to get a pillow and lie down (because he had been handling heavy sacks of corn all morning), and continued to quarrel with him; that as the defendant turned around to the deceased, the latter jumped for a pistol, which was lying on the mantelpiece, and got it, and the defendant went out; that the deceased met him at the door which goes out of the room to the little porch, and hit the defendant on his right temple with the pistol; that the defendant got up and staggered around through that room, intending to go out of the door, but there was a heavy trunk against the door, and as he started to go out he found the door was locked, and the defendant then started to go to the back door, and his sister begged the deceased to stop and come back, but the deceased replied that he was going to kill the defendant, that he was going to put an end to the defendant that day, or the defendant was going to put an end to him; that the deceased had the pistol in his hand and came back, facing the defendant again; that the defendant thought the deceased was going to kill him, and he picked up a gun that was sitting in the corner. The defendant further stated: “I don’t know whether he intended to shoot me or not, but he had knocked me in the head with the pistol, and he made that remark again that he was going to put an end to me that day; and I picked up the gun. To tell the truth, in raising the gun, I don’t remember any more how that gun went off than nothing in the world. I didn’t want to kill him. I didn’t intend to kill him; not nothing of the sort. . . If I had, I could have put the gun on him up here, but I didn’t intend to kill him, but to ward him off from me with the gun; because he had practically killed me where he had hit me in the head, in the temple. . . When the gun fired he turned around and started in the room. The pistol fell on the floor, and the negro picked it up and put the pistol between the bed and the mattress. The negro told my sister that he (the negro) had put it between the bed and the mattress: He told me to give him the gun, the negro did, and I handed it to him.”

In the course of his long statement to the jury (which it is not necessary to quote in full, because much of it deals with matters wholly irrelevant to the trial), the defendant stated that his brother said to him after the shooting: “You have, shot me, but I don’t [115]*115want you to be hurt.” In another portion of the statement the defendant said that he had not, intended to kill the deceased, but that the deceased was on him, and he was frenzied from being knocked down by the pistol; that he had drunk a lot of whisky up to that time; and he protested his affection for his dead brother.

It will be seen that there was sharp conflict between the testimony for the State (if the jury found that the statement of the deceased was a dying declaration) and the statement of the accused; but in no view of the testimony adduced by the State could a verdict be found for a lower degree of homicide than voluntary manslaughter; and the defendant’s own statement is inconsistent with the supposition that the gun was fired by accident, although he may not have intended to kill his brother. The statement of the defendant— which was very incoherent—suggests only two .possible defenses: that, acting under the fears of a reasonable man that a felony was about to be committed upon him, he shot to defend himself against the pistol in his brother’s hand; or that he fired the shot while in a condition of maudlin drunkenness. Neither of these positions affords the accused a tenable defense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 S.E. 1047, 12 Ga. App. 111, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-state-gactapp-1913.