Lakeland v. State
Lakeland v. State
Opinion of the Court
The indictment charges that Audrey Lake-land, alias Audrey Laider, committed the crime of murder by “cutting and stabbing . . Marie Rice with a certain butcher-knife.” Having been convicted of voluntary manslaughter, the defendant assigned error upon the overruling of her motion for new trial. According to the evidence, the defendant entered the room in which the deceased was living, and without any sort of provocation cut the deceased in the back with a butcher-knife at a time when she was seated in a chair, inflicting wounds from which death resulted shortly thereafter. After stating to the jury that the deceased had been giving her trouble about her husband for over a year, and had told her that “she was going to have him” and the defendant could not stop her, the defendant further stated: “I was cooking, and went out to call my husband to cut some wood, . . and I had the knife in my hand, and I didn’t dream of seeing them together. I wasn’t even thinking about nothing like that, and he went over there andT called him, . . and I went on in there, and as I passed the window I saw they was in the bed together. So I run around the house and I went on in the kitchen, and I stood there in the hall at her door; so the lady of the house, I told her, ‘Miss Florence [the woman at whose house the deceased boarded], you know all about this, but that’s all right,’ I says. And this girl opened the door, and my
The evidence would have supported a conviction of murder; and a careful consideration of the defendant’s statement to the jury satisfies us that under the law it warranted a conviction of no less a crime than voluntary manslaughter. Under these circumstances, there is no merit in the contention that in giving a certain charge to the jury the court improperly deprived the defendant of her right to defend under the fears of a reasonable person, grounded upon an apparent danger, or of her defense that “the killing took place immediately before or immediately after a wrongful act on the part of the deceased and the husband of the defendant, the nature of which, act was such as to excuse the defendant or mitigate the crime.” See Williams v. State, 107 Ga. 721 (4) (33 S. E. 648). In regard to the defense last mentioned, we quote from Daniels v. State, 162 Ga. 366 (133 S. E. 866) : “While the jury may acquit the slayer of all crime, and should do so if they find that the killing was necessary, or apparently so, either to prevent the commission of a sexual act or the completion of it, yet, if the circumstances were not such as to impress a rational mind that it was necessary to take human life to prevent the sexual intercourse, and if the jury should find that the slayer killed the deceased under a violent and sudden impulse of passion, engendered by the circumstances, the homicide would be manslaughter.” To sustain this ruling, the Supreme Court cited Mays v. State, 88 Ga. 399 (14 S. E. 560); Patterson v. State, 134 Ga. 264 (67 S. E. 816). See also Hill v. State, 64
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.