20 Ga. App. 82 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
Carson was convicted of throwing a missile into a passenger-car of the Georgia Railway and Power Company. (Penal Code of 1910, § 512.) The testimony of the conductor, Ingram, identified Carson as being the person who threw the missile into the car. The testimony of the dispatcher of the company, York, identified Carson as the man pointed out by Ingram. The defendant undertook to prove an alibi by circumstantial evidence and by the positive evidence of his sister, and by his own statement that he was not present at the time. He was convicted, his motion for a new trial was overruled, and he excepted. One of the grounds of the motion was based on newly discovered evidence. The newly discovered witnesses were Fred Coleman, T. H. Buckalew, A. J. Elliott, J. V. Chastain, and Dr. T. M. McCluskey. The affidavit of Fred Coleman states that he is the person who threw the missile into the car, and that he is the person that the dispatcher talked to, and is the person pointed out by Ingram, the conductor in charge of the car; that the defendant, Carson, was .not -present and did not throw the missile at the car. Buckalew, Elliott, Chastain, and McCluskey, in their affidavits, say that at the time of the alleged crime they saw Coleman running away from the scene, and that they did not see Carson there. The witnesses were strongly vouched for, and it does not appear that the defendant, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, could have discovered the witnesses before the trial. At the trial the only positive evidence in behalf of the defendant was that of his sister and his own' statement. The newly discovered evidence is material, and probably would produce a different verdict on another trial. The
Judgment reversed.