McCrackin v. State

105 S.E. 487, 150 Ga. 718, 1920 Ga. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 15, 1920
DocketNo. 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 S.E. 487 (McCrackin 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
McCrackin v. State, 105 S.E. 487, 150 Ga. 718, 1920 Ga. LEXIS 308 (Ga. 1920).

Opinion

Gilbert, J.

1. The defendants, McCrackin and Eadnev, were convicted of the murder of Jones. Grounds 21 to 31, inclusive, of the motion for new trial relate to written requests to charge, which were refused. These requests include instructions in regard to when a private person may arrest an offender; the' law in regard to killing in a case of mistaken identity where the defendant acts in good faith; the right of a private citizen to arrest where he has reasonable and probable grounds to suspect that the [719]*719person is escaping or attempting to escape; the right of a private citizen, acting as a member of a local posse organized by an arresting officer to apprehend one who has committed a felony where such private citizen is a resident in some other county; the right of such private citizen to defend himself against an attack by the person whom he undertook to arrest under the circumstances detailed above; that an apparent necessity acted upon in good faith is equivalent to a real necessity; that an arresting officer is bound to execute penal warrants placed in his hands, and to that end may summon to his assistance any citizen of the neighborhood; that if a crime is committed in the presence of the officer and he has no warrant, it is his duty to make an arrest of the offender, and he has a right to summon citizens of the neighborhood, and the acts of citizens shall be subject to the same protection and consequences as official acts; that a private citizen has as much right to arrest a fugitive felon, where the emergency calls for immediate action, as a public officer, and while so doing has equal protection of the law; that as a rule a person authorized to make an arrest can use as much force as is necessary under the circumstances to make an arrest, and no more; and that if a person authorized to make an arrest is resisted in his attempt to make a lawful arrest, he has the right to use such force as may be necessary to compel submission and accomplish the arrest, and is not bound to wait until he is actually assaulted before resorting to force, but if it is apparent that the person he is seeking to arrest intends and is able to resist with violence, the person making the arrest may use such force as he may reasonably consider necessary to compel surrender. It is obvious that the applicability of all of these principles of law requested to be given in charge by the defendants depends upon whether or not the court properly refused the written request to charge the following, which refusal is excepted to in the twenty-second ground of the motion for a new trial: “I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that if in this case you believe that the defendants believed that the deceased was the man who had shot at the sheriff, and if they believed in so doing that he had committed the offense of a felony, or if .you find that from the evidence that said act of shooting was a felony, and that the defendants in good faith believed that the man upon the bridge was undertaking to escape, then they would have the right [720]*720to arrest him, and the fact that it developed that the person that they were actually undertaking to arrest was not the person that they thought they were arresting would make no difference, provided, as I have stated, they believed that the deceased was the negro for whom they were searching, and for whom a warrant had been issued, as is contended by them, and that they acted in good faith upon this belief.” It is insisted that this instruction was legal and pertinent for the reason that the defendants killed Jones under the honest belief that the deceased, a white man, was Sam Brown, a negro, whom they as part of the sheriff’s posse were undertaking to arrest, believing Brown guilty of a felony and that he was endeavoring to escape. The court instructed the jury, among other things, as follows: “If you believe from the evidence in this case that the deceased was manifestly intending or endeavoring, by violence or surprise, to commit a felony upon the defendants, and the defendants killed him, it would be justifiable. On the other hand, the court instructs you that a person can not create an emergency which renders it necessary for another to defend himself, and then take advantage of the effort of such person to defend himself in the face of such emergency so created, and justify the taking of the life of such person. . . The court instructs you further, in this same connection, that for the defendants, or either of them, simply to have called to the deceased to halt, and without more, would not justify the deceased in committing a felony upon the defendants and deprive them of defending against the same; but you look to all the facts and circumstances of the case and the statement of the defendants, as to what was the truth of the case with respect to the issues in the case, and under the rules of the law which I have already given you in charge.” In view of this concrete statement of the law applicable to the defense set up by the defendants, which was more favorable to the defendants than the law entitled them to, it was not cause for a new trial that the court failed to comply with the request to charge, mentioned above, made by counsel for the defendants, in respect of the right of officers and of private individuals to arrest a perpetrator of a crime who was attempting to escape, even if the request stated correct principles of law on that subject. Moreover, the request was not an accurate statement of the law, in that it [721]*721omitted the important principle that the defendants must, in order to justify themselves, have reasonable grounds of suspicion that the deceased was the escaping felon, and that they made reasonable effort to determine that fact. Furthermore the requests were not applicable under the facts of the case. It appears that Sam Brown had been reported to be disorderly on a public highway. The sheriff of the county was informed that a warrant had been issued by a justice of the peace for the arrest of Sam Brown on a charge of being drunk on a public highway. The sheriff, on this information, but without having the warrant himself, undertook to arrest Brown, who fired a gun at him and fled. Hews of these facts rapidly spread in the. neighborhood, and a number of citizens, among them McCrackin and Radney, appeared to render assistance to the sheriff in apprehending Brown. The sheriff stated to McCrackin and Radney that he was sick, had no cartridges, and was going home. According to the defendants the sheriff said, “ Let’s all go homo and put up our guns.” According to the sheriff he said, “ I told all of them to put up their guns and go to bed. I did not tell any of them to go out there and guard the bridge and hold up people on the highway. I insisted that they go home.” The defendants decided to go in search of others of the party, including one Marion Holland, to inform them of the sheriff’s decision. Upon meeting Holland the latter suggested guarding two bridges over Ochlochnee river near by, in order to capture the negro. The defendants, neither of whom knew the negro, took with them David Knott, who did know the negro, and undertook to guard one of the bridges. The moon was shining. McCrackin and Knott were seated on one side of the approach to Hie bridge, and Radney sat opposite them. Within a few moments approaching footsteps were heard. McCrackin raised up, and, seeing a man, said “Halt,” or “Hold up.” At this point there is a conflict as to who began the shooting. The defendants, in their statements, say the deceased, on being halted, immediately began to shoot. The State’s evidence authorizes the finding that the defendants began the shooting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 S.E. 487, 150 Ga. 718, 1920 Ga. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrackin-v-state-ga-1920.