83 Va. 326 | Va. | 1887
after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The evidence at the trial is certified with the record. That for the commonwealth was wholly circumstantial, the principal points of which, relied on to connect the prisoner with the alleged felony, are these:
1. That for some time before the burning the prisoner hnd the prosecutor, Fitzgerald, were not on friendly terms, though the latter testified that “just immediately before the burning there was a marked difference in the manner of “the prisoner towards him; that he was “particularly polite ” And he also testified that he had had difficulties with others of his neighbors beside the prisoner.
3. That about 12:30 o’clock of the night of the burning, the prisoner was seen by a witness passing along the streets of' Buckingham courthouse, going in the direction of the prosecutor’s farm. And that the same witness, having occasion to go out again, about an hour and a half later, observed “a bright light in the direction of Mr. Fitzgerald’s.” The burning occurred about two o’clock in the night time.
4. That about ten days after the burning, the prisoner went to the house' of the witness, Shoemaker, and taking him aside, said excitedly that a Eichmond detective had been to his house, and that Eddie Johnson, a boy in his (the prisoner’s) employ, had gone off with him ; that he did not know what Eddie was going to tell him, and inquired of the witness whether he could swear that the boy was not of good sense. To which the witness replied that he could not; that he thought the boy was of very good sense; whereupon the prisoner left him, and returned home.
5. That on the day the prisoner was arrested, and while on his way to appear before the magistrate by whom the warrant of arrest had been issued, he met the prosecutor, and said to him, “ I want you to remember, Mr. Fitzgerald, when this thing has been done with, that an innocent man has been punished. I know who burnt your corn-house. It was Willis Shoemaker, and if you will go on my bail-bond, and let me stay out of jail to-night, I can see two men by whom I can prove it.” He was, however, committed to jail, where he has since remained, and no effort on his part
Such substantially is the evidence relied on by the Commonwealth to prove that the crime charged in the indictment was committed by the prisoner. We have made no allusion to the evidence to prove the corpus delicti, because upon that point there is no serious controversy. We will therefore assume, without reviewing the evidence, that in that particular the case of the Commonwealth is established. But does the evidence prove the guilt of the prisoner? We are very clearly of opinion that it does not. The most that can be justly said of it is that it merely excites suspicion against him, which is a very different thing from proving his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; that is, to the exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis consistent with his innocence. It is needless, however, to ■comment upon it. The error is self-evident, and the verdict ought to have been set aside and a new trial awarded.
The evidence is circumstantial, and although it is true that such evidence is often stronger and more satisfactory than' that which is direct, yet the well established rule, sanctioned by this court in numerous cases, is that circumstantial evidence in a criminal case ought to be acted on with the utmost caution. In Johnson’s Case, 29 Gratt. 796, Judge Moncure, after laying down tbe rule, observed further that “where the evidence leaves it indifferent which of several hypotheses is true or establishes-only some finite probability in favor of one hypothesis, such evidence cannot amount to proof, however great the probability may be.” This proposition, he said, was literally taken from 1 Starkie on Evidence, 572, and correctly expounds the law. See also Grayson’s Case, 6 Gratt. 712; S. C., 7 Id. 613; Smith’s Case, 21 Id. 809; Dean’s Case, 32
The judgment will therefore be reversed and the case-remanded for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.