H. J. Hunter was convicted of the murder of M. B. Young, and recommended to mercy. The State introduced testimony tending to show that on Saturday morning, March .31, 1917, Young came into Atlanta on an Edgewood avenue streetcar. The car stopped at Fort street about 7:35 a..m., and in going out of the car Young had an altercation with a young negro man who appeared to block the way out. After getting off the car Young stepped to the edge of the sidewalk, and was in the act of lighting a cigar when suddenly he was hit on the head with what the evidence describes as a “rock,” a “brick,” or a “flat rock,” which had been picked up and thrown at him by the negro with whom the altercation was had on the car, and who had alighted from the car just as it moved off. The negro fled, and Young, stunned by the blow, sat down. A few minutes thereafter an automobile hastily carried him to the Grady hospital; the distance from the scene of the difficulty to the hospital being, according to one of the witnesses, “a three-minutes ride in an automobile, or a five-minutes walk.” The wound, which, appeared to be a slight superficial injury to the scalp, was dressed at the hospital; and Young left the hospital unassisted, for the purpose of going to his work, but on reaching the walkway he suddenly sank down, in the language of one of the medical witnesses for the State, “without any apparent rhyme or reason,” lost consciousness, and died about five or six o’clock of the same day. Subsequent examination revealed a bloodclot upon the brain, from which death resulted. The evidence for the State tended to show that the negro with whom the altercation on the car occurred was the defendant
1. On the trial the court permitted the State to put in evidence the testimony of two witnesses delivered by them in person on a former trial of the defendant under the same indictment, over the objection that such evidence was incompetent and violated the constitutional right of the defendant to be confronted in person with the witnesses against him. The preliminary proof made by the State was that these witnesses at the time of the present trial were not in the State of Georgia. The witnesses were therefore inaccessible to the State, and their testimony delivered in person on the former trial of the defendant under the same- indictment was admissible over the objection urged. The precise question was considered and ruled adversely to the contentions of the plaintiff in error in Smith v. State, 147 Ga. 689 (95 S. B. 281).
2. Over the objection that the same was hearsay, the State was allowed to prove the declarations made by the deceased to the hospital physician after he had been taken to the hospital and while his wound was being dressed, from ten to twenty minutes after the infliction of the injury, as nearly as can he gathered from the evidence. The statement was in direct response to inquiries of the physician. It follows: “He [the deceased] said, in attempting to get off this street-car there was a negro in the way, and he first asked him to get out of the way, and the negro would not move, and in order to get off the car he elbowed him, pushed him out of the way; he got off the ear at Bort and Bdgewood and stopped at the corner at a telephone post to strike a match to light a cigar, and just as he finished lighting it he turned and noticed this negro come close to him, and said that was all he could remember. He said he was hit in the head, with what he did not know at that time; it stunned him. I says, ‘Did you chase him?’ He says, * No, I could not, I was stunned, I did not know which way to turn.’ . . He described the one who assaulted him as being a young slender negro compared in height to officer McCullum. He described him also as being snagley tooth; and in reply to the
The assault upon the deceased had completely terminated before his declarations were made. He had been carried from the scene of the difficulty to the hospital. The declarations were made in response to direct inquiry. This fact alone would not render them inadmissible. The declarations were a mere narrative of past occurrences. They related to things happening upon the street-car and to the main fact in question. They have precisely the same force and effect as if they had been made days or even weeks after the occurrence. They depend for their strength and value upon the veracity of the declarant. It is impossible to lay down a rule by which to test in every case the admissibility of such declarations. They must, however, be contemporaneous with the main fact, or so nearly connected therewith in point of time as to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought; and the nature and character of the declarations must be such as to show that they were spontaneously and voluntarily made, that is, that they were clearly and palpably influenced by the main fact in issue. Futch v. State, 90 Ga. 472, 478 (16 S. E. 102); Western & Atlantic Railroad Co. v. Beason, 112 Ga. 553, 557 (37 S. E. 863); Walker v. State, 137 Ga. 398, 401 (73 S. E. 368). On account of the error in admitting evidence of the declarations in this case, a new trial must be ordered.
3. One of the instructions of the court to the jury, complained of in the motion for new trial, was as follows: “A man is presumed to intend the natural consequences of his act; and if this man struck [the deceased] with a rock and [the deceased] died from that blow, he is presumed to have intended to kill him.”' The court also charged the jury: “If you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that this defendant did with malice aforethought intentionally strike [the deceased], from which blow he died, and that the blow was without justification, or provocation which would reduce it from murder to some lower grade of homicide, then the form of your verdict would be, cWe, the jury, find the defendant guilty.’ That would mean guilty of murder.” Under the facts in the record these instructions were erroneous. They left out of consideration the character of the weapon and the manner of its
4. The remaining assignments of error are not such as to require a reversal, and will not be specially considered. For the reasons pointed out in the second and third divisions of the opinion, the judgment overruling the motion for new trial is
Reversed.