104 Ga. 530 | Ga. | 1898
Ingram, Bailey and Handy were indicted in Calhoun superior court for the murder of King, and were put upon trial under a plea of not guilty. The record discloses substantially the following state of facts revealed by the testimony introduced in behalf of the State: King was the general agent of the owner of the land upon which he was living, having under his superintendence the farm. Ingram, also a white man, was living on the same place as an employee of the owner, and Bailey and Handy were negro laborers or renters upon the same land. In the early part of the night of October 31,1897, King received a pistol-shot wound, in the horse-lot on the farm, from
From a careful and thorough research into the record of this case we fail to find any testimony whatever that would authorize even a reasonable ground of suspicion against the defendant Handy. 'The only evidence against the other defendant that would authorize such a suspicion is that which relates to a threat, and a proposition'he made to another to assassinate the deceased. Doubtless he saw that he was suspected at the inquest, and seeing the relatives of the deceased armed, in a moment of such excitement, it is not strange and is entirely consistent with the theory of his innocence that he should have endeavored to escape from such an atmosphere of danger. There is no testimony in the case that tends to connect him, or any one else as to that matter, with the perpetration of the crime charged. The evidence, to say the least of it, points with as much force to the conclusion that the death of deceased was the result of an accidental shooting of his own pistol as it does to the theory that he was assassinated. Mere threats to take the life of another, not coupled with any other evidence connecting the party with the perpetration of the deed he threatened to commit, are not sufficient to base a verdict of guilty on, espe