11 Ga. App. 318 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
Lead Opinion
The accused was seen by the State’s witness coming through a cotton patch on a dark night, carrying a lantern. He reached a somewhat secluded spot where one Arnold and three other negroes were sitting on the ground. The accused pulled out of his pocket three pints of whisky and handed one pint to each of the negroes, except Arnold. As he was pulling out the fourth pint, the State’s witness stepped up and remarked, “I will take that one.” Thereupon the four men who were sitting on the ground fled. The accused remained a few minutes and ran off. The State’s witness ran after him, but could not catch him. It does not appear whether they took the liquor with them, but it may be safely assumed that they did, in the absence of proof to the contrary. No money was seen to .pass, but when the witness walked up, the accused had a dollar in his hand. Á negro church association was in session at Grantville, and a large crowd was there. The transaction above described took place about 300 yards from the church. When arrested the accused had $1.30 on his person. He claimed that the whisky belonged to Arnold, that he brought it
Evidently the jury did not credit this rather lame explanation of the transaction. Just why, if the whisky belonged to Arnold, the accused should have given everybody except Arnold a pint of it and retained the fourth for himself is not made clearly to appear. It may be that the accused was acting as agent for Arnold in making a sale. If so, he is equally guilty. If the whisky was his, as the jury had a right to believe, then there were circumstances authorizing a legitimate inference that a sale was intended. A sale may be shown by circumstantial as well as by direct evidence, and it is not necessary that any particular price should be agreed on. Smith v. State, 9 Ga. App. 230 (70 S. E. 969). A sale on credit is as much a violation of the law as a sale for cash. Finch v. State, 6 Ga. App. 338 (64 S. E. 1007).
The secretive method employed, the dark night, the unusual place, the dollar in the hand, the flight of the four negroes, were all circumstances pointing very strongly to a criminal transaction, and the jury had a right to infer that a sale, rather than a gift, was intended. Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The evidence against the defendant clepends entirely upon circumstances, and to my mind they are too slight and inconclusive to authorize conviction. I do not think that circumstances of similarly frail character could have induced a verdict of guilty had the defendant been accused of a more heinous crime. No man can gtand more strongly than I for the principle that the jury is the final arbiter as to the facts, and that their finding upon facts should be absolutely binding upon the courts; but the security of human liberty and the safety of the innocent, as well as the punishment of the guilty, depend upon the salutary rule that no one shall be convicted of crime solely upon circumstantial evidence, unless the only reasonable hypothesis which can rationally be deduced from the circumstances proved is inconsistent with innocence. Where a conviction rests upon circumstantial evidence alone, and the inference that the defendant is innocent is just as reasonable as that he is guilty, the defendant is entitled to an acquittal, and yet the prerogative of the jury to
To my mind the mere fact that a negro delivered three pints of whisky to three persons, when there is no evidence that he received any money for it, does not any more reasonably establish the proposition that he was selling the whisky, or was the agent of an undisclosed seller, than that he brought to them their own whisky that they had purchased from some one else, and was a mere errand boy, or that as their agent he had bought the whisky for them. It does not appear that the location was at all secret. If there is any place that is public during a meeting of a negro church association, it would be such a place as the crossing of the road and the railroad described in the evidence as being within 300 yards of the church where the meeting was in progress. The adjacent grounds were not in the woods, but were a cotton patch, and it was a “moonshiny” night. The marshal of Grantville swears that the railroad crossing in question is a very public crossing, and in sight of the church, at which there was a very large number of negroes. It is possible, of course, that the defendant may be guilty. The fact that he delivered three pints of whisky is suspicious. The fact that he happened to have as much as a dollar in the month of September is also another very suspicious circumstance, indicating that perhaps he got it from the sale of liquor. But the law does not authorize conviction upon suspicion, and in the evidence there is nothing to contradict the defendant’s explanation that he had gone to a cotton patch and gotten the liquor for Arnold, where Arnold left it, upon Arnold’s promise that he would give him a
It appears to me that in the absence of any direct evidence that there was a sale, the bare circumstance of one person’s handing another a bottle of whisky (even if it had not been explained) was not sufficient to authorize the conclusion that the person handing the whisky to the other was selling it to him; and unless the theory of a sale is the most reasonable conclusion that can be drawn from the occurrence, the finding of the jury was unauthorized. To hold that the circumstance of one’s handing another a bottle of whisky is prima facie sufficient to authorize conviction of a violation of the law would, in some instances, penalize a gift of wine or other intoxicating liquor where its use might be necessary as medicine, or required for sacramental purposes. I admit that the circumstance, colored by its surroundings, might authorize the conclusion that the delivery was made for the purpose of a sale, and not as a gift, but generally this would not be the case, because where either a guilty or an innocent intent may attach to an act, the law always prefers to ascribe an innocent intention. In a case where one delivers an intoxicant to another in a place evidently provided for the common and usual dispensing of such articles, 1 think it could very well be assumed that a sale was intended, but where it appears merely that the defendant handed three other parties a pint of liquor, and it is undisputed that no money was paid, and the explanation is given, and not denied, that he rendered this service in expectation of getting a pint for himself, I do not think the case is strong enough to say that the defendant is guilty. beyond any reasonable doubt.