118 Ga. 320 | Ga. | 1903
The plaintiff in error was found guilty of the crime of arson, and upon his motion for a new trial being overruled he excepted. The motion for a new trial was based upon the general grounds, upon alleged newly discovered evidence, and alleged error in overruling a motion to rule out certain evidence introduced by the State. Briefly stated, the evidence upon which the accused was found guilty was substantially as follows : The barn which he was charged to have feloniously burned was.in the town of Mar-low, belonged to J. F. McEachern, contained corn, hay, fodder, cottonseed hulls, and rice-flour, and was discovered to be on fire shortly before or shortly after midnight. At the time of the fire, and for a considerable period of time before, the accused was in the employment of the owner of the barn, working as a general helper around the owner’s home and little farm, and feeding his horse and
On the morning after the fire the accused was heard to say that he “didn’t reckon there would be any more hell raised about the
In 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, § 217, in discussing the question whether extra-judicial confessions, uncorroborated by any. other proof of the corpus delicti, are sufficient to support a conviction,, the learned author says: “ In each of the English cases usually cited in favor of the sufficiency of this evidence, there was some corroborative circumstance. In the United States the prisoner’s confession, when the corpus delicti is not otherwise proved, has been held insufficient for his conviction; and this opinion certainly, best accords with the humanity of the criminal code, and with the great degree o'f caution applied in receiving and weighing evidence of confessions in other cases, and it seems countenanced by approved writers on this branch of the law.” In People v. Badgley, 16 Wend. (N. Y.) 53, it was held: “Evidence of confession alone, unsupported by corroborating facts and circumstances, is not sufficient to convict; there must be.proof aliunde of the corpus delicti, although such proof need not be conclusive.” In Stringfellow v.
In Westbrook v. State, 91 Ga. 11, a headnote case, this court itself, in passing upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict of guilty, said : “ There was direct evidence of the burning, and circumstantial evidence from which the jury could rightly infer that the fire was not accidental but felonious. Thus the corpus delicti was established independently of the confession. The evidence was ample to warrant the verdict.” This seems to be a distinct recognition of the principle that the corpus delicti must be established independently of the confession of the accused. In the case under consideration, if the confession of the accused be eliminated, there is no evidence at all of the corpus delicti. The mere fact that the barn was discovered to be on fire about midnight did not even tend to show that the fire was a felonious one. Upon such proof, the law presumed the fire to have been accidental. Phillips v. State, 29 Ga. 105; Murray v. State, supra. Such would have been the presumption in any case upon mere proof of the burning,, and the presumption applies with peculiar force to the burning of' a house filled with such inflammable material as this barn contained. Surely the mere fact, testified to by one witness, that the accused seemed, from his appearance and demeanor, to be mad because he was no longer allowed to carry the keys of the barn, did not tend to show that the fire was of incendiary origin. This evidence was on a par with that to which Judge McCay alluded in Murray's case, when he said: “ The looks of the prisoner and his apparent unwillingness to-’’ talk with the witness, as mentioned by him, is evidence so liable to misconstruction as to be of hardly any weight.” The remark of the accused, the morning after the fire, that he “ didn’t reckon there-would be any more hell raised about the keys, now,” while tending,, in sqme slight degree, to cast suspicion upon him, can hardly be said, when considered apart from his confession, to tend to establish, as a fact, that the house was feloniously burned. If he was mad because he had been deprived of the privilege of carrying the keys of the barn, he would have been just as likely, perhaps more-so, to have made this remark if the fire had been purely accidental.. The fact, if it can be said to have been established as a fact, that-he was heard, at some undisclosed hour of the night when the fire-.