(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. Error is assigned, in the first special ground of the motion for new trial, because the court admitted in evidence, over objection, the testimony of Dr. W. B. Hardman, the attending physician and surgeon, who testified as to the declarations of the deceased as. to the cause of his death and the person who killed him. These declarations were made on several occasions between the first and last visits of Dr. Hardman to the deceased. The last declaration was made about five or six days before his death. In each of these declarations he said to Dr. Hardman that he could not live. After making an examination of the wounds the witness told the deceased that he was going to die. The deceased sáid he believed it. The witness said, “It is very plain you are going to die, and in your present condition there is no hope in the world for you.” Dr. Hardman further testified: “I did not say ‘without an operation.’ . . I said, ‘There is no chance for you; noiv- if you are willing to take a shot at it, I am; and if this cord [spinal cord] is just being pressed on, instead of cut in two, I might relieve you, that is, give you some function of your cord; but if there is no pressure there, I can’t do you any good. I want you and your family to understand that.’ . . I did not say I could relieve him;.I said the chances were that the function could be relieved. I have operated on them as bad as he was. I told him that, after he made the statement. He said he would take a shot at it. As to that meaning that he had some hope, it was to see whether it was pressure or the spine was cut; the x-ray did not show it. That being true, under my opinion, as to his certainly having some hope that I would find pressure there instead of a cut, he was willing to grab at last straw; and so was I, if he was willing. He was still grabbing then and still hoping that I would benefit him; . . he said it meant death anyway, regardless of operating or whether I did not operate, it was death anyway. He made that statement several times. . . He was in a dying condition at the time he made that declaration as to who shot him and how it occurred. A man may be in a dying condition and may be saved. He may have a big
Error is assigned, in the second ground, on the following charge: “The court has admitted to you evidence of dying declarations of the deceased. I charge you that you should consider such testimony with great caution, and before you should consider the same you should be satisfied that such declarations were conscious utterances in the contemplation and the immediate article of death, and you are to pass finally for yourselves op the question whether or not the declarations were conscious utterances in the contemplation and immediate article of death.” The criticism is that by this language the court assumed that the declarations were in fact dying declarations; and that instead of saying the jury should “consider such testimony with great caution,” the court should have charged that such testimony should be received with great caution. While the charge was not entirely accurate, it is not cause for reversal.
2. The evidence, considered in connection with the defendant’s statement at the trial, authorized the following charge to the jury on the subject of mutual combat: “I charge you in this ease that if you believe from the testimony, including the defendant’s statement, that the defendant and the deceased had a mutual intent to fight, or a fight had begun between the deceased and the defend
3. Error is assigned, in ground 6, on the following charge to the jury: “When a homicide is proven, the presumption is that the killing is murder, and that it is for the evidence to show justification, or to reduce the offense to a lower grade; and it is incumbent on the prisoner to show this to the satisfaction of the jury, unless it is shown from the evidence produced against him.” It is insisted that this was erroneous, for the reason that the presumption of innocence was in favor of the defendant until his guilt was established beyond a reasonable doubt; and that when a homicide is shown, there is no presumption that such killing is murder, and no burden is put upon the defendant to show his innocence, or to show that the grade of the offense was one lower than murder. This complaint of the charge is controlled by the principle ruled in the case of Mann v. State, 134 Ga. 760 (53 S. E. 334, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 934), where it was held that in the trial of one indicted for murder, where the evidence adduced to establish the homicide presents two conflicting theories of fact, one based upon circumstances indicating malice, and the other upon warranted inferences which negative its existence, it is proper in such case to charge the jury that the law presumes every homicide to' be malicious, until the contrary appears from dr
4. Headnote 4 disposes of ground 8, and requires no elaboration.
5. Jesse Black, as a witness for the defendant, testified that when the shooting took place he was lying on a desk, asleep; that the first thing he heard was a shot, and after the pistol fired he went to Mr. Embry and pulled his shirt back and saw where he was shot; that Fitzpatrick walked out of the door; and that he took a pair of knucks off the hand of Embry and put them back in his pocket. The State, in rebuttal, offered the testimony of Mrs. Embry and her son, Watson Embry, to the effect that Jesse Black told them, shortly after the homicide, that Fitzpatrick shot Embry and that he had “no more right to shoot him than I did to rise up and shoot Watson,” that Embry was doing nothing at the time he was shot, but was lying down on a bench, that he (Black) and the defendant were engaged in a dispute over a game of cards and called on Embry to settle the dispute, that deceased stated that he thought Fitzpatrick was wrong, whereupon defendant cursed and shot him. In grounds 10 and 12 of the motion for new trial it is complained that the judge in charging the jury did not limit the application of this testimony to the subject of impeachment of the witness Black. There was no request, written or otherwise, for the judge thus to limit the consideration of the evidence. The law on the subject of impeachment generally had been given by the court to the jury; and in the absence of a written request to charge the jury to limit the consideration of the evidence to the question of impeachment, the failure of the court so to instruct the jury is not cause for a new trial. Helms v. State, 136 Ga. 799 (4), 803 (72 S. E. 246). The ruling in the case of Jones v. Harrell, 110 Ga. 373 (35 S. E. 690), is not controlling here. On the trial of that case Jones, the husband, was asked if he had not told certain persons that he was agent of his wife. He denied this. A witness was introduced to show that the husband had represented himself to these persons as such agent. This testimony was objected to, the objection was overruled, and the evidence was admitted for the purpose of contradicting the husband; the judge
6. The thirteenth ground of the motion for new trial complains that after the case had been submitted to the jury, and while they were considering the case at night, before any verdict had been reached, their foreman, W. P. Dean,, separated himself from the jury and went a considerable distance, not in company with an officer, to the home of D. II. Cox, and entered said home and communicated with and held a conversation with Cox. It is alleged that this conduct of the juror was without the knowledge or consent of movant or his counsel, and was not known to them until after the verdict; and that the juror had opportunity to hear the case discussed on the streets of the town in which the case was being tried, ox in the home of Cox. In the light of the contradictory affidavit of Dean, the juror, which by consent was made a part of the record, the conduct of the juror in separating himself from the jury is not cause for reversal. The juror in his affidavit testified that on the morning after the trial had been concluded, and before the jury had made its verdict, the jury returned about daylight to the court-house to resume their deliberations of the case, and when they arrived at the court-house they found the doors locked. Members of the jury asked who had the keys. Deponent stated that D. H. Cox was the keeper of the court-house, and that in all probability he had the keys. Deponent was requested to go to the home of Cox, which was in sight of the court-house and of the place where the jury were at that time. Deponent went to the home of Cox, who, in response to his knock on the door, invited him in; but he did not go in. He stated to Cox that the jury
7. The other grounds (4, 5, 7, 9, 11) of the motion for new trial, so far as they are sufficient to raise any question for consideration, are not of such character as to require elaboration, and they show no cause for reversal.
Judgment affirmed.