Newkirk v. State

196 S.E. 911, 57 Ga. App. 803, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 14, 1938
Docket26754
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 S.E. 911 (Newkirk 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
Newkirk v. State, 196 S.E. 911, 57 Ga. App. 803, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 393 (Ga. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Guekry, J.

The defendant was indicted and convicted of the offense of “shooting at another.” The evidence for the State shows that the defendant’s father was having a dispute in respect to the possession of certain farm lands. The defendant and his brothers [804]*804were working on this farm for their father. On the day of the alleged shooting he (the defendant) and his two brothers had driven to a field on the disputed premises to do a day’s plowing, and had carried with them two shotguns and a Winchester riñe. They went to a near-by. well to get a drink of water and carried their guns with them, and had started back to work when the sheriff of the county and his deputy rode up in his car, followed by one of the claimants to the land (George Young) in a truck. Warrants had been legally sworn out against the defendant and his brothers charging them with a misdemeanor and placed in the hands of the sheriff and his deputy to be served, and were in their possession at this time. When the sheriff and his deputy were within about eighty yards of the defendant he and his brothers were squatting down in a “crouched position with their guns in their laps.” The sheriff testified: “I just walked out to the edge of the road and called to them, I said: ‘Boys, we have warrants for you fellows here — come on let’s go to town.’ They spoke up, all three of them commenced talking, and they said, ‘No, we are not going with you.’ I said, ‘Oh,, yes, you are. What’s the matter with you boys ? I have warrants for you; I am an officer out here with warrants to serve for [on?] you; all of them are misdemeanor warrants, and you can go on in to town, give bond, and come on back. Come on let’s go to town.’ They said, ‘No, we are not going.’ I said, ‘Oh, yes, you are, what’s the matter with you boys?’ I said ‘You haven’t anything much against you now, but you are going to have something against you when you go to resisting an officer.’ They were then standing up with their guns in a ready position . . the guns were pointing out in the direction that we are [were?] in — they were not pointing directly at us then, but they were standing there with their guns, just like this, at that time. The guns were held across their bodies — in front of them, with the butts of the guns at the elbow and the muzzles elevated in front of them, and they said, ‘No, we are not going with you. We know what you come out here for; you come out here to put us off the land and we are not going.’ I said, ‘No, I didn’t come out here for any such purpose as putting you off the land— I don’t know anything about the land trouble, if you have got any trouble, and I care nothing about it. I come out here in the discharge of my duties, as- an officer, to make this arrest.’ They said, [805]*805‘No, we are not going with, yon.’ Then they began to get more boisterous and told me to get off the place. One of them said: ‘Mr. Sumner, we are not going with you, and you get off this place.’ These defendants were known to me and I was known to them. I have known them all their lives. They have known me for years — all their lives.” The sheriff further testified, after having detailed his acquaintance with the defendants, as follows: “About the time they had said all this, and this much had happened, we -then advanced out a little ways in the road — what I was undertaking to do, after I saw their attitude, was to try and handle them without any trouble, to us or to them, but, after I was convinced I couldn’t, then Mr. Bruce and myself started walking toward them, we had our service pistols, mine was in the scabbard, his was in his scabbard, and I had mine right on this side, in the scabbard, and Mr. Bruce had his on about the same place on him, right about here. We had not drawn them at that time. I had not put my hand about my pistol, I had my hands by my side — I made up my mind I would not put my hands about the pistol because I wanted to let them know I was trying to handle it in the best way I knew how. I looked at Mr. Bruce and he had his hands down that way. We commenced walking towards them and talking to them. I had an idea they were bluffing, and we could go walking up to them, without putting our hands about the pistols — get to them and talk to them and get the guns away from them — that was the idea I had in mind. As we walked toward them, they come up with their guns and hollered, ‘Stop ! Stop ! Don’t come no closer, don’t you come no closer!’ and finally they just hollered, ‘Don’t you come a step closer.’” The officers then turned back to the road where they left their car and went up to the house where the truck was stopped, and just before doing so the defendants again told them that they were not going with them and to get off the place. At the truck the officers got two shotguns and five shells loaded with buckshot, three for the sheriff and two for the deputy, and then walked back to the defendants who were still standing with their guns held in a threatening position. A large chinaberry tree with two or more prongs stood between them, and the sheriff ordered the deputy to get behind this tree. The sheriff again remonstrated with the boys, and endeavored to get them to come on with him peaceably, and they again demanded that he stop his ad[806]*806vanee and pointed their weapons at him. He had walked about twenty feet towards them when they told him not to come a step farther and pointed their guns at him. The sheriff walked back to the tree and told his deputy not to get exposed more than he could help, and then commanded the boys to drop their guns, and, “When I come up they come up, and I shot and they shot, the shooting all started, almost at the same time. Talking about Mr. Bruce shooting — I know he shot but I don’t [know?] when he shot — the bark begin to fall off the tree — bullets were whizzing by, and the shooting lasted then until I cocked the other barrel of the gun, and come out on the side of the tree, and shot again — all that time the shots rained in there from them, some of them hit the tree.”

The defendant took part in the shooting. Several bullets were afterwards found in the tree and one place where a rifle bullet had passed through. The officers fired four times and some eighteen or twenty shots were fired. The deputy and another eyewitness corroborated the testimony of the sheriff. After the shooting was over, several empty shells and cartridges were found where the defendant and his brothers had been standing while the shooting was in progress. One of the brothers was struck in the buttock by buckshot. The defendant and his brothers left the scene without being arrested. The defendant, in his statement, after detailing the dispute over the land which occurred prior to the time of the shooting, stated: “Mr. George Toung was on the north side of us; we saw him, running, and he come up to the truck and he grabbed up the guns, and he tuck the shotgun off the truck and told us to drop it; and the old man, he tuck the gun away from him and he told him to give him the gun; then he come back to the tree and we dropped our guns to our sides, and he throwed up his gun and shot, and we wheeled to run and he shot and the bullet hit Lester, then he wheeled and shot, and I wheeled and shot, and John, he wheeled and shot, and then we made it home.” He also denied that he knew that it was the sheriff. There was no other evidence.

The court refused to give in charge to the jury a written request, in substance as follows:, “An arresting officer, in attempting to make an arrest of a defendant against whom he holds a warrant, . . in which defendant is charged with offenses graded as misdemeanors, may not employ force to the extent of using a deadly [807]

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Related

Bennett v. State
311 S.E.2d 513 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1983)
Mullis v. State
27 S.E.2d 91 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1943)
Morton v. State
10 S.E.2d 836 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 S.E. 911, 57 Ga. App. 803, 1938 Ga. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newkirk-v-state-gactapp-1938.