14 Ga. App. 442 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
In the present instance the trial judge did not err in making clear to the jury the only real issue in the case, and in instructing them as follows: “The defendant sets up the defense of alibi in this case; that is to say, he contends that he is not guilty, because he was elsewhere at the time the crime was committed, and therefore he could not be guilty. If that defense be true you would acquit him.” But this instruction, which was proper to preclude any confusion in the minds.of the jury (if the jury were thereafter correctly instructed as to the full scope of the evidence of alibi), was of itself prejudicial, in view of the fact that later in the charge the court said: “In determining this question, look to all the evidence on the question of alibi,” etc. If the court had not thus confined the investigation of the jury to the evidence on the question of alibi, and had merely said, “In determining this question, look to all the evidence,” we might have been justified in holding this was a sufficient compliance with the requirement for instructions upon the second branch of the doctrine of alibi. The vice in the instruction as given is that the court, after clearing- away the underbrush by fairly stating to the jury the only real issue of fact, placed upon the defendant the burden of establishing his alibi to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury, and deprived him of any benefit of his evidence of alibi unless the jury were reasonably satisfied it was true. In other words, the. jury were told that if they were as reasonably satisfied of the truth of the alibi as of any other fact in the case, they should acquit the defendant, but they were not told what was their duty if they were not reasonably satisfied of its truth, and that if from the evidence they were uncertain whether he was at home, as he claimed to be, they should give him
Judgment reversed.