126 Ga. 100 | Ga. | 1906
(After stating the foregoing facts.) 1. One ground •of the demurrer was that the presentment contained two distinet offenses in one and the same count, one offense being an attempt to obstruct a railroad track, and the other being an attempt to wreck a railroad train. The Penal Code, § 520, provides that any person who “shall willfully and maliciously destroy or in any manner injure or •obstruct, or shall willfully and maliciously cause, or aid, or assist, or •counsel, or advise any other person to destroy, or in any manner injure or obstruct any'railroad,” shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary for a term not less than four years nor longer than eight years.” The Penal Code, §1040, provides, “If any person shall attempt to comíait a crime, and in such attempt do any act towards the commission of such crime, but shall fail in the perpetration thereof, or shall be prevented or intercepted from the execution of the same,” such person shall be punished, and then provides the punishment in such cases where there is no other provision for punishment in the Penal Code. The punishment provided for an attempt to commit a crime punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary for not less than four years is declared to be not less than one year nor more than four years. The presentment in the present ease was unquestionably intended to charge the ■offense of an attempt to commit the crime defined in section 520. Section 512 provides for the punishment of a person who shall
2. Another ground of the demurrer was that the presentment charged an attempt to obstruct the track of the Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Company, when there was no such company in Georgia. The words, “the Georgia, Southern and Florida Railway Company,” import a corporation, and the allegations of the indictment were sufficient to show the ownership of the track attempted to be obstructed, without an averment that the company was a corporation. When the name of a person in a pleading is such as to import that the person is a corporation, there is a presumption to this effect, and this presumption prevails until the contrary is made to appear. Maddox v. State, 115 Ga. 219 (7), and cit. There was no error in overruling the demurrer to the indictment.
3. Evidence of the commission of a crime other than the one charged in the indictment is generally not admissible; but there are exceptions to this rule. Evidence of prior attempts by the accused to commit the same crime upon the victim of the offense for which he stands charged is admissible; or where other offenses committed by the accused tend to prove malice or motive or the like, evidence of other offenses is sometimes admitted. But in all cases where evidence as to the commission of other offenses is admitted, there must be a connection between them and the offense with which the accused is charged. “To make one criminal act evidence of another, a connection between them must have existed in the mind of the actor, . . or it must be necessary to identify the person of the actor by a connection which shows that he who committed the one must have done the other.” Cawthon v. State, 119 Ga. 396, 408, and cit. Some of the evidence admitted in the present case, as to prior attempts to obstruct the track of the railway, did not connect the accused in any way with such prior attempts. This evidence was inadmissible and highly prejudicial to the accused.
Judgment reversed.