Worley v. State

75 S.E. 240, 138 Ga. 336, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 300
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 S.E. 240 (Worley 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
Worley v. State, 75 S.E. 240, 138 Ga. 336, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 300 (Ga. 1912).

Opinions

Beck, J.

John Worley and Hugh Boggs were jointly indicted for the murder of Jasper Turner. Worley was put upon trial and convicted of the offense of murder, and a recommendation was made by the jury that he be imprisoned for life in the penitentiary. The defendant thereupon made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled.

The State introduced evidence tending to show that the homicide was wilful and unprovoked murder, committed by the defendants [337]*337for the probable purpose of securing possession of an automobile which belonged to the decedent and which they had hired for the evening, ostensibly for the purpose of taking a ride into the country, the decedent acting as chauffeur. The State having exercised its right to sever, and Worley being on trial, Boggs, the other defendant, was introduced as a witness by the defense. According to his testimony he and Worley came to Savannah upon an excursion. They were in and about Savannah several days. On the day of the homicide, July 31, 1911, desiring to take a ride in an automobile, they hired the car of the decedent and engaged him to carry them for a ride, for $2.50 an hour. After they had been riding for two hours on a country road, witness told the owner of the car they had gone far enough, and to turn back; at this point the defendants and the decedent engaged in a controversy as .to the amount of fare due, the decedent insisting that they owed him $10, while they contended that only $5 was due. The witness emphatically stated to the decedent that he would not be robbed in that way; thereupon the decedent drew a pistol, pointed it at the witness Boggs, and then Worley hit the decedent with a hammer. Witness jumped from the car, and the decedent turned on Worley and both of them fell out of the car; decedent had Worley on the ground, and Worley called loudly for help; whereupon decedent started towards Boggs, who thereupon seized the hammer and hit his assailant over the head with it. Decedent had dropped the pistol in the car when Worley hit him. When the decedent turned from Worley, who was upon the ground, to assail Boggs, the latter hit at him twice, hit him a glancing blow first, and then, as decedent came on,'hit him again. The witness then stated how they placed the body of decedent in the caT, started back to the city of Savannah with him, and then, finding him to be dead, became alarmed and started away from the city of Savannah, and finally placed the body in a well. The witness testified at length as to many other particulars and details tending to explain the conduct of himself and his joint defendant, which it is not necessary to set forth here. The defendant made a statement which, in so far as it is material to the issues made in the record, is substantially as follows: They hired Turner’s automobile, as stated by Boggs, and went out on the country road. When the altercation as to the fare arose, as detailed by Boggs, and Boggs said “I will not stand [338]*338to- be robbed like that/’ the decedent, Turner, said, “You will give me $10, or I will blow jour brains out,” and he drew a pistol and pointed it at Boggs; the defendant on trial thereupon, in order to protect himself and companion, picked up the hammer, which was in the bottom of the car, and hit Turner on the side of the head; the latter fell over and dropped the pistol in the car; the accused hit him because he thought he was going to shoot Boggs and then kill him, the defendant on trial. After Turner was hit, he turned round and grabbed Worley, and they fell out of the side of thfe car. “He and I rolled out of the car, and we struggled there on the ground. He commenced choking me, and reached his hands in his pocket like this (indicating), trying to get something out of his pocket. I hollered to Boggs to come and help me;-and as he was coming the negro turned me loose and started after Boggs in a sort of crouching position; and when he got close to Boggs, Boggs hit him, it seems like a glancing blow, and, the negro still coming on, Boggs hit him again and the negro rolled on the ground.” Worley further declared, “The negro had the pistol pointed at my partner, and I was afraid he was going to shoot us both.” The statement continues with details relating to the disposition of the body and the reason for the flight.

■ ' 1. The court did not err in refusing to charge the jury upon the subject of voluntary or involuntary manslaughter. If the defendant’s statement and the testimony of the witness Boggs, who was jointly indicted with him, be true, the plaintiff in error was not guilty of any offense against the law. When he struck the decedent, he did it because, according to his statement and the .testimony of his companion, Boggs, the decedent had a deadly weapon leveled at Boggs, and the defendant acted under the fear that the life of himself and his companion was about to be taken by the decedent, to whom they had given no other provocation fox a deadly assault than by refusing to pay, as hire for a car, a sum which they insisted was greater than the amount which they had.contracted to pay. Hnder these circumstances, the assault by the decedent upon the defendant Worley and Boggs was of a felonious character; and if Worley acted, when he struck the deceased, in defense of himself or his companion against such an assault, the blow was justifiable, and if that blow caused the death of Turner, the homicide was justifiable. If the blow stricken by Worley did [339]*339not cause the death of Turner, but left him with strength enough, after dropping the pistol, to make further assault upon Worley and to hurl him to the ground or to throw himself upon Worley after the latter had fallen upon the ground, and he desisted from the last attack only when Worley’s cries for help brought his companion Boggs to his aid, and Boggs, as Turner approached him in a crouching position, struck him twice, the first blow being a glancing one, Boggs would have been justifiable in striking this blow, and, if death resulted from it> neither Boggs nor Worley would have been guilty of any offense. Or, if it could be held that Boggs, coming up in response to the cries for help' from his companion, who was upon the ground and in the grasp of an assailant, who but a few moments before had tried to murder them, used more force than was necessary in repelling the attack of Turner, who approached him in a crouching position, and that this was done not to repel a felonious attack, inasmuch as Turner was then unarmed, and Boggs, having struck with more force than was necessary to repel the attack, was guilty of voluntary manslaughter, as death resulted from his last blow, still that would not render Worley guilty of voluntary manslaughter. For, according to the testimony of Boggs and the statement of Worley himself, Worley had done nothing more in the first instance than to strike in order to save his own and his companion’s life, and then when he was on the ground, with the assailant on him, he had IHried for help. If the one who came to his help under these circumstances, when attacked in turn by Worley’s assailant, struck with more force than was absolutely necessary, Worley was in no way responsible for the violence of the blow and did not share in the guilt of the man who struck it, if there was any guilt at all upon the part of the latter.

The evidence for the State, largely circumstantial, tended to show an unprovoked murder.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.E. 240, 138 Ga. 336, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worley-v-state-ga-1912.