(After Stating the foregoing facts.) It. is quite apparent that an attempt was made in the trial court to obtain a verdict of guilty and submit to the jury the question of recommending mercy. Numerous cases have reached this court where it was quite evident that the attorneys and trial judge were uncertain as to the law on the question of procedure when it was sought to thus handle a capital case. It is provided in the Code, § 26-1005, that the punishment for murder shall be death but may be confinement in the penitentiary for life if the jury trying the case shall so recommend, or if the conviction is founded solely on circumstantial evidence the
*244
presiding judge may sentence to life imprisonment, and that in the former case it is not discretionary with the judge and in the latter it is. It is thus seen that the law makes no provision, where conviction rests upon direct evidence, for punishment other than death unless the jury trying the case shall recommend mercy. Manifestly where the case is not tried by a jury or the judge sitting as a jury, the law makes no provision for punishment by life imprisonment. Therefore, since a plea of guilty stands upon the same footing as a conviction by a jury
(Ford
v.
State,
162
Ga.
422,
There is no question presented to this court as to the sufficiency of the evidence to authorize conviction of the accused. The general grounds of the motion are not argued, and counsel for the movant concede that the evidence is sufficient, but we are called upon to render a decision upon the law. The defendant in this case entered a plea of not guilty. That plea was never formally withdrawn. The accused entered upon the trial of the case with the presumption of innocence in his favor. This presumption challenged the truth and credibility of all the evidence offered against him, and such presumption can be overcome only by a verdict of the jury finding that sufficient evidence has been introduced to overcome the same. State
v.
Goodwin,
We have been unable to find that any case involving the identical circumstances here found has ever been brought before the Supreme Court. In
Manchester
v.
State,
171
Ga.
121 (
Judgment reversed.
