The defendant, Henry Patterson, was convicted of the murder of W. E. McBee, and sentenced to be hanged. On the trial evidence was submitted in behalf of the State, tending to show that the homicide occurred near the house of the defendant’s wife (who was living separate and apart from her husband at the time) at about eleven o’clock at night. During the day the sheriff of the county, who had a'warrant for the defendant, requested the deceased to watch the premises of the defendant’s wife, in order to ascertain if the defendant was lurking around. Two pistol shots were heard, as if they were fired near the house of the defendant’s wife, and shortly thereafter some neighbors, who were attracted to the scene by the pistol shots, found the body of the deceased lying about 91 feet distant from the house. When his body was thus discovered it was found that a bullet had passed through his neck, cutting the internal jugular vein, and the ground where the body was lying showed marks of profuse bleeding from the wound. The deceased was attired in his usual dress; his hat was lying within a few feet of the body. The defendant contended, that, as he approached the house of his wife that night, he saw a man enter the house, and
1. In the motion for new trial the defendant complained of the following charge: “The law does not justify the killing after the adultery or sexual intercourse with the wife or daughter has been completed. A man may, in good faith, defend his wife’s or his daughter’s virtue on the same principle of reason and justice that he might defend his own person and be justifiable in doing so, but the law will not justify him in .deliberately killing a man for a past or an accomplished act of sexual intercourse, either with his wife or his daughter. The killing after such an act has been completed is not one of the instances which stand upon the same footing of Teason and justice as those enumerated in the Penal Code of this State.” The error alleged is, 'that the- charge was inapplicable; that it was misleading and confusing, and impressed the jury with the idea that if the deceased had just completed the act of adultery with the defendant’s wife, and the defendant discovered it immediately while the deceased was in the presence of his wife and killed him, the homicide would not be justifiable. In this excerpt from the charge the court was presenting to the jury the law applicable to the theory advanced by the defendant that the deceased had just committed, or was about to commit, adultery with the defendant’s wife. There was evidence which authorized an inference that the shooting could not have occurred in the house, as claimed by the defendant. The court was submitting to the jury the appropriate law, based upon the hypothesis that the deceased had engaged in the act of sexual intercourse in the house, but that he was fired upon after leaving the house. The charge was applicable to a theory made by the record, and not open to the criti cisms made upon it.
3. Complaint is made of an omission to charge Penal Code section 985, concerning the relative value of positive and negative testimony. In every case it is the duty of the judge, with or without request, to give to the jury an appropriate instruction as to the law on each substantive point or issue involved in the ease, but a judge is not obliged to charge, in the absence of a timely written request, as to any collateral matter. Tience a failure to charge the law with respect to the impeachment of witnesses will not, in the absence of a request, be ground for a new trial. Robison v. State, 114 Ga. 445 (39 S. E. 862). We hardly think the code section was applicable to any phase of the testimony; but even if it were, the omission of the judge to give the section in charge, in the absence of a timely written request, is not sufficient ground for a. new trial.
4. The court allowed the deputy sheriff, over objection, to testify that on the day of the homicide he informed the deceased that he had a warrant for the defendant;’that he suspected that the defendant could be found on the plantation where his wife lived; and requested the deceased to look around the place, and, if be discovered the defendant’s presence there, to telephone him of the fact. The objection to this testimony was that it was irrelevant and illegal. This testimony was admissible to explain the presence of the deceased at the place where his body was found, and to illustrate the issue that he was not there for the purpose of having sexual intercourse with any member of the defendant’s family, but for the-
5. The evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict, and no error is made to appear.
Judgment affirmed.