dissenting. This court has said: “This court will go as far as the rules of established law will permit in protecting the virtue and chastity of the wives and daughters of this State from the criminal wiles of the adulterer and seducer, and will uphold husbands and fathers in all they may lawfully do to maintain and protect the sanctity of their homes and firesides.” And again, “The law permits and will justify the homicide of another by the husband to prevent the seduction of the wife, or even to prevent the committing of a single act of adultery, if by his previous conduct he has not forfeited the right.” Wilkerson v. State, 91 Ga. 734, 737; Gossett v. State, 123 Ga. 434. As has frequently been stated and as reiterated: “But in such cases, whether relating to wife or daughter, the idea of prevention or defense against an im*882pending or progressing wrong must be involved, in order to render the homicide justifiable.” Gossett v. State, supra. “To deliberately kill in revenge for a past injury, however heinous, after reason has had time to resume its sway, can not be justifiable.” Hill v. State, 64 Ga. 453 (2); Gossett v. State, supra. In Wilkerson v. State, supra, the court said: “The simple truth is, that while the law may justify a homicide committed for the purpose of preventing adultery, and may excuse a homicide on the part of one who promptly resents unto death an unauthorized and totally indefensible invasion of his marital rights, the law never makes justifiable a homicide committed in a spirit of revenge, and for the purpose of revenge only.” The court was speaking there particularly of facts which would justify the killing or would constitute justifiable homicide. Those principles are related to but not identical with the question of what facts would be sufficient to justify the excitement of passion, and to reduce the homicide from murder to voluntary manslaughter. It must not be forgotten, whether discussing voluntary manslaughter or murder, that the basic principles upon which one is to be adjudged guilty or not guilty of either of these offenses is one of protection; that is, the right of one to protect the wife or daughter.
Where, instead of slaying the adulterer or seducer for the purpose of protecting the virtue of one’s family and to protect the sanctity of his home, the wife or daughter is slain, it would seem that the very foundation of the law has been destroyed. In other words, in laying down the law mentioned above, the purpose was not to palliate or to excuse the killing of the wife or daughter, as the case may be, but that does not take away the right to have the offense reduced because of the human element of weakness due to the excitement of irresistible passion. The Penal Code, § 65, provides that in order to reduce murder to voluntary manslaughter “there must be some actual assault upon the person killing, or an attempt by the person killed to commit a serious personal injury on the person killing, or other equivalent circumstances to justify the excitement of passion and to exclude all idea of deliberation or malice, either express or implied." (Our emphasis.)
In Fry v. State, 81 Ga. 646 (4) this court said: “That the wife was unchaste or otherwise a bad woman would certainly not justify the homicide, nor would it, in the absence of 'a sudden *883heat of passion resulting from adequate cause, tend to reduce the homicide below the grade of murder.” There it was expressly held that the sudden heat of passion which would be sufficient to reduce the homicide below the grade of murder must result “from adequate cause.” In that case the husband was convicted of the murder of his wife. It could not be insisted that there is anything in the evidence upon which the charge could have been based. The prisoner’s statement is set out in full in the statement preceding the opinion. It will be seen that the accused stated to the jury that he had heard that his wife was going with another man; that he asked a friend about it; that his friend verified his suspicions; that he learned this on “Monday morning;” that on Wednesday he went to the church (where from the evidence it appears that his wife and other colored people were cleaning up a cemetery). The accused stated that on arriving there he said, “I called her and told her I wanted to speak to her, and she said she had him.” He further stated “I would not have killed her for nothing in the world, for I thought a heap of her.” In the statement he does not expressly state that he had heard that his wife had had illicit intercourse with another man, but that appears from the evidence; therefore we treat the statement as if the accused had said .that a friend had told him on Monday of having seen his wife in illicit intercourse with another man; that he went to the church on Wednesday, saw his wife, told her he wanted to speak' to her, and “she said she had him.” It is insisted that these words, “she said she had him,” amounted to an admission by the wife that she had had illicit intercourse with the man in question, and that they were sufficient to excite passion which was irresistible, and that the facts were such as to justify such excitement of passion. It has been held in a number of cases that a killing done under a sudden passion caused by the discovery of the wife’s illicit conduct, when acted upon with sufficient promptness, would constitute equivalent circumstances as those terms are used in the Penal Code, § 65; but that provision is coupled with the further provision that the circumstances must also be sufficient “to exclude all idea of deliberation or malice, either express or implied.”
In Smith v. State, 73 Ga. 31, the court held: “If the killing was without malice, that is, was done without a deliberate intent unlawfully to take human life, then it was not murder. If it was *884done without malice, upon a sudden heat of passion, it was voluntary manslaughter; and whether it was done with or without malice depends much upon the weapon used. If done without legal provocation, upon a sudden falling out, with an instrument not likely to produce death, the jury might infer a want of malice, and in such case it would be voluntary manslaughter; but if the killing was done upon a sudden heat of passion, provoked by words and abusive language used by the deceased, with a deadly weapon, it would be murder, the weapon used showing the intent on the part of the accused to take human life.” In Rogers v. State, 128 Ga. 67 (3), the court held: “The fact that the deceased, the wife of the slayer, may have been unchaste would not of itself amount to a justification of the homicide; nor would it, in the absence of a sudden heat of passion, resulting from adequate cause, be sufficient to reduce the homicide below the grade of murder.” In that case, as stated in the opinion, the defendant “insists that his wife had been guilty of such conduct as to satisfy him that she was unchaste and a woman of bad character.” The court said that “even if the defendant’s conclusions from what he had observed of his wife’s conduct were correct, it did not justify him in taking her life, nor reduce the killing from the crime of murder to any lower degree of homicide.” Under the code and under the decisions, it has been uniformly held, that, notwithstanding the heinous wrongs that may have been done, if homicide is committed unlawfully under circumstances which do not exclude all idea of deliberation or malice either express or implied, the homicide is not reduced from murder to manslaughter. The question, therefore,' is whether, under the facts of this ease, malice is excluded.
Under the undisputed facts shown by the evidence and repeated in the statement of the accused, the accused on Monday morning was told that his wife had been guilty of illicit intercourse with a named man. He waited until Wednesday, when his wife, along with others, was at a cemetery near a colored church. He left his home and his duties, together with' several other men, and went in an automobile to the cemetery. He had provided and was armed with a pistol, a deadly weapon. On arrival he did not go immediately to his wife, but after a few moments he approached within calling distance and requested her to come to him. She made no answer. He' thereupon approached and called her. She *885still made no answer to him. She was sitting with a baby in her lap. He drew his pistol, and she ran with the baby in her arms around the cemetery. The accused pursued her until she fell, the baby rolling on the ground from her. As she undertook to arise the accused came upon her. Placing his left hand upon her shoulder to prevent her from rising, he shot her in the side. As she fell to the ground he shot three more bullets into her prostrate body. She died almost instantly. Can it be said in any view of the case that he was actuated by that sudden heat of passion which will reduce the crime from murder to manslaughter as provided in the Penal Code, § 65 ? Could the jury say that the circumstances were sufficient to exclude all idea of deliberation and malice, either express or implied? Certainly he had deliberately armed himself with a deadly weapon and sought his wife out at the cemetery. He had had this information since Monday morning, and could have inquired of her as to its truth at any time at his home between Monday morning and Wednesday. An additional fact appears in the evidence, that he was preparing to leave his wife and go off to Florida with the wife of another man. In Perry v. State, 102 Ga. 365, at p. 376, the court said: “Unquestionably, a homicide committed on Monday could not be justified by proving that on the preceding Friday the deceased had committed an offense upon the wife of the accused; and this would be equally true if the crime of the deceased had been done on the Saturday after that Friday. Assuming, then, that though such' a crime was committed on Friday the husband did not know of it until the next day, and on the following Monday hunted down and killed the offender, he would be in no better position than if the knowledge on which he acted had come to him on the very day of the offense which provoked his subsequent act of vengeance.” In the tenth headnote on p. 367 of the same case, it was said: “One against whom or whose wife an offense, no matter how heinous, has been committed, can not in law be justified ‘in taking vengeance in his own hands and in deliberately seeking out and following up the wrong-doer and slaying him.’”
It is insisted, however, that under the evidence the charge as requested should have been given to the jury, because the question of cooling time was one exclusively for determination by the jury. It is a correct abstract principle of law that the question of cooling *886time is for the jurjr, but not where the undisputed facts demand a finding that the accused acted with deliberation, and, armed with a deadly weapon on Wednesday after the information came to him on Monday of the illicit intercourse,, deliberately shot down his defenseless wife. According to his own words, the accused went to the scene of the homicide with the deliberate intention to kill Hanks. He went armed with a loaded pistol. The fact that he did not find Hanks there, but found his wife and coolly, deliberately, and cruelly killed her, destroys the contention that he acted upon a sudden heat of passion aroused by his wife’s admission, and that he acted on the impulse. In the circumstances shown in this case, there is nothing to justify the excitement of passion, and therefore cooling time does not enter into it. For these reasons the court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury as requested.