The circumstances of the arrest are as follows: a police officer looking through the window of a detached-garage on Powers Ferry Road in Fulton County observed the chassis of an automobile from which the fenders, hood, quarter panels, doors, motor and other items had been removed. Two and a half to three hours later he returned with three other officers who, looking through the open garage door from a vantage point half way down the driveway, observed thе defendant, with an acetylene torch, at work cutting up a 1963 Oldsmobile. The three officers advanced, and the one in front drew his pistol. The defendant said, “You have got me.” The officers searched the garage and ascertained that thе automobile was one which had been reported as stolen. They asked the defendant’s permission to search the house, which was granted, and other items belonging to the vehicle were found inside. Between thirty minutes and an hour later a ticket was written charging the defendant with a violation of Code Ann. § 68-434a, altering the identification number of a motor vehicle. The charge was made on the basis of what the officers saw; the new-appearing car was being dismantled and the door post with thе serial number on it had been removed. One of them testified that the arrest was made when the defendant was deprived of his liberty by the officers approaching with a drawn gun; another that he did not consider the arrest made until he wrote out the ticket. The defendant considered himself under arrest when he saw the men coming up to him. No words of arrest were formally spoken, but “if *788 the defendant voluntarily submits to being considered under arrest, or yields on condition of being allowed his freedom of locоmotion under the discretion of the officer, the arrest is complete.” Code- § 27-201. The defendant went into the house with the officers; neither he nor they considered he had freedom to leave at that point. The arrest was made upon arrival, and it remains to be determined whether or not it was a legal arrest. “An arrest for a crime may be made by an officer, either under a warrant, or without a warrant if the offense is committed in his presence, or the offender is endeavoring to esсape, or for other cause there is likely to be a failure of justice for want of an officer to issue a warrant.” Code § 27-207. It cannot be contended that there was a valid arrest for the offense of knowingly possessing stolen property because no arrest was made at the time for that offense under the testimony offered. Under Code Ann. § 68-434a (a) it is a misdemeanor to wilfully remove or falsify an identification number of a motor vehicle except in conformance with § 68-420a providing that аny person dismantling a vehicle shall immediately on removal mail the serial plate to the Georgia State Revenue Commissioner for cancellation, and § 68-434a (b) makes-it a felony wilfully and with intent to misrepresent its identity to remove an identificаtion number with intent to convert or defraud.
Property obtained through an illegal search and seizure is not admissible in evidence as against objection on Constitutional grounds. Mapp v. Ohio,
There is uncontradicted testimony that the defendant gave permission to search the premises on Powers Ferry Road and that his wife gave permission to search the premises at his home on Bolton Road. The mere fact that the defendant was under arrest at the time does not demand a finding that his consent was as a matter of law involuntary, nothing further appearing. A permission to search has no greater еlement of self-incrimination than a confession, yet the mere fact of custody alone will not
*791
invalidate the latter.
Russell v. State,
An officer testified: “I asked him how he came about getting into this business and he told me he had been in it before and that he had done this type of work, that he didn’t know why he wanted to get involved in something like this again.” The defendant in his statement to the jury substantially confirmed the conversation, but said it involved his “business,” which was welding and filling orders in regard to repairing automobiles for their owners, and that it was hard work. Obviously the conversation occurred; whether what the defendant said was intended at the time as an admission of activities in connection with stolen automobiles, as contended by the Stаte, was a question of fact. The testimony was not itself inadmissible under the “other criminal transactions” rule. “It is no objection to evidence which has a direct relevancy to the case on trial that it also tends to show a distinct and separate crime on the defendant’s part.”
Hall v. State,
Other statements by the defendant were also the subject of testimony, as, for example, that he had asked for the release of an automobile impounded from the Bolton Road address exceрt for its motor, which had been taken from the stolen car at Powers Ferry Road. The court charged: “If you believe that there have been any incriminatory admissions made by the defendant, the law says that all admissions should be scanned with care and received with great caution and there should not be a conviction on incriminatory admissions, if there are any, unless *792 the same are corroborated by other evidence, either circumstantial or direct, which will connect the defеndant with the crime with which he is charged.” It is contended that this authorized the jury to convict on the defendant's admission alone “if corroborated by other evidence.” The charge must be examined as a whole; here the court fully and fairly chargеd the elements necessary for conviction and that the degree of proof of the offense must exclude every reasonable doubt. The import of the instruction was to the defendant’s benefit, and it did not allow an inference that conviction would be authorized on the corroboration of the admission alone.
As stated above, count 1 of the indictment charged larceny of an automobile and count 2 possession of stolen goods; the defendant was acquitted on the first and convicted on the second. During the course of his instructions to the jury the court said: “There is another principle of law in passing upon the question of whether the defendant is guilty of either count 1 or count 2 which you should take into consideration, and that is the principle of law known as recent possession.” Error is assigned on this statement as tending to lead the jury to believe the law of recent possession was applicable to the charge of receiving stolen goods. It is, of course, applicable to this offense: possession of recently stolen goods must be proved but it is not of itself sufficient to authorize a verdict of guilty in the absence of proof of knowledge of the fact and intent on the part of the defendant.
Bird v. State,
The general grounds of the motion for new trial are not urged, and the special grounds are without merit. The trial court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
