13 Ga. App. 657 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
The accused was indicted with a number of others for the offense of gaming. In our opinion the testimony as to his guilt was wholly circumstantial. The deputy sheriff, who was the main witness for the State, testified that he in company with Mr. Bowell, the chief of police of the City of Fort Valley, approached in sight of the alleged gamesters, and in his presence Mr. Bowell wrote down the names of all who composed two crowds of persons apparently engaged in gambling, except one man, whose name was unknown. J esse Allen, the defendant, was in one of the gatherings of persons who were apparently gambling. This witness first testified, that he saw Allen playing in a game of cards for money; that Allen was playing in a game with others in a circle with him; “I saw him reaching over and picking up. I also saw him reaching over for his cards.” But it very plainly appears that all of this was merely a conclusion of the witness, reached from a general survey of the surroundings,- because he immediately follows this testimony with the statement: “I could not and did not see any cards or money in the defendant’s hands.”
We would be far from saying that this testimony would not. authorize a conviction if the jury, from the circumstances detailed, had reached the conclusion evidently entertained by the witness; but this should not deprive the defendant of having accorded to, him a trial strictly legal in every respect, nor obviate the necessity of the jury’s taking into consideration the well-recognized rule of law'that where the guilt of the accused is wholly dependent upon circumstances from which his guilt may reasonably be inferred, it is the duty of the jury to acquit, if the innocence of the accused may with equal reason be adduced from the circumstances in proof. In the present case the jury, under such an instruction, might have
The other exceptions in the motion for new trial are without merit. Judgment reversed.