41 S.E.2d 912 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1947
1. "A confession is a voluntary statement made by a person charged with the commission of a crime, wherein he acknowledges himself to be guilty of the offense charged. A statement which admits the commission of an act, but which also gives legal excuse or justification, is not a confession."
2. "Where there is evidence showing that the defendant admitted the homicide of which he is accused, and he states in connection therewith no facts or circumstances of excuse or justification, or gives reasons which are insufficient to furnish any legal excuse or justification, the statement amounts to a confession of guilt, and authorizes a charge on that subject."
3. Where the defendant admitted that the whisky belonged to him without saying anything more, this raised a legal presumption that he knowingly possessed, had, or controlled it. This presumption was rebuttable.
4. Without anything more known or stated, such admission of specific facts, together with the legal presumption deemed to exist, constitute all the essential elements of the offense of having, controlling, or possessing the prohibited liquor.
5. When the defendant admitted that "the whisky was his" or belonged to him without stating anything more, this was the legal equivalent of an admission that he was in the possession of it, which would be a confession that he possessed the whisky as charged.
6. A confession being direct evidence, the judge did not err in failing to charge on circumstantial evidence, in the absence of a request.
7. The jury were authorized to find that there was a confession of the crime charged and that the corpus delicti was proved; the evidence authorized the verdict.
The defendant denied making the statement which the State contended was a confession.
The judge instructed the jury: "The State contends that a confession was made by the defendant in this case, and on that subject you are instructed that a confession is a free and voluntary statement made by a defendant without being induced by another by the slightest hope of benefit or the remotest fear of injury, wherein he acknowledges himself guilty of the crime charged. When testimony in the nature of an alleged confession is offered, gentlemen, it is for the jury to determine whether or not such alleged confession was, in point of fact, made or not; and if the jury should believe there was a confession, then, and in that event, the following principles of law would govern the jury in determining the weight of such testimony with reference to such alleged confession. All admissions should be scanned with care and confessions of guilt should be received with great caution. A confession, alone, uncorroborated by other evidence, will not justify a conviction." See Lancaster v. State,
In Grubbs v. State,
One of the cases which the defendant strongly relies upon isPressley v. State,
Where one is accused of unlawfully having, controlling, and possessing the prohibited liquors here alleged in the indictment, the crime is the having, possessing, or controlling such liquors knowingly. Morris v. State,
"When it is said that, if persons contract for the sale of a specific chattel, it is presumed that the title passes; and that when a man voluntarily kills another, without any more known or stated, it is presumed to be murder, and that when a written communication to another is put in the mail, properly addressed, and postage prepaid, it is presumed that the other receives it, and that when one has been absent seven years and no knowledge of him had by those who would naturally know, death is presumed." Thayer on Common-Law Evidence, 326; Scott v. State,
When Melvin Clark, an officer, testified that he had found whisky not in the house but on the premises where the defendant lived or on the land adjacent thereto, and had told the defendant when and where thereon he had found it, and that the defendant had "said the whisky was his" without saying anything more, this raised a legal presumption that the defendant knowingly possessed, had, or controlled such liquor. The presumption, however, was rebuttable. This was an admission of specific facts which, together with the legal presumption deemed to exist, constituted all of the essential elements of the offense of having, possessing, and controlling such prohibited liquors.Cook v. State,
The summation of what we have said above seems to us to be that, when the defendant said that the whisky was his without stating anything more, this was the legal equivalent of an admission that the prohibited liquor was in his possession, and thus there was an admission of all of the essential elements of the crime charged; and the court did not err in his charge on confessions or in failing to charge on circumstantial evidence. The confession being direct evidence, the conviction did not depend exclusively upon circumstantial evidence; and therefore, in the absence of an appropriate request, it was not erroneous for the court to omit to charge the law of circumstantial evidence. Smith v. State,
"A conviction may be lawfully had upon a free and voluntary confession, though the same be not otherwise corroborated than by proof of the corpus delicti." Wimberly v. State,
The facts in this case differentiate it from the cases cited by the defendant.
The evidence authorized the jury to find that there was a confession of the crime charged and that the corpus delicti was proved; and hence the evidence authorized the verdict.
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J., concur. *884