9 Ga. App. 208 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
In tire superior court of Miller county the plaintiff in error was convicted of the offense of hog-stealing. His motion for new trial was overruled, and it is insisted that this judgment should be reversed, because the verdict is contrary to law and to the evidence, and because the court erred in failing to instruct the jury that “all admissions should be scanned with care, and confessions of guilt should be received with great caution,” and, further, because the court failed to charge that “a confession alone, uncorroborated by other evidence, will not justify a conviction.”
To the writer it would seem, as clearly intimated by Justice Atkinson, in delivering the opinion in the Nobles ease, supra, that where the evidence of a confession was one of the most material links in the testimony against one accused of crime, the court should instruct the jury at least in the substance of section 1031 of the Penal Code of 1910. It can not be denied that to the popular mind a confession is primarily the -highest and best proof of. guilt, and for that reason we think that, even without request, the jury should always be told that confessions should be received with caution, and that, unless the confession is corroborated, it will not authorize conviction. However, the Supreme Court has frequently decided that in the absence of a written request it is not reversible error to omit any reference whatever to the subject of confessions. In Malone v. State, 77 Ga. 767-772,
While, of course, we are bound by these adjudications, for the reasons above stated, and upon much the same ground as that upon which it lias frequently been held that- the judge should specially instruct the jury upon the subject of circumstantial evidence where the guilt of the accused depends entirely upon circumstances, we think that the better practice would require the judge, in any case' where the evidence outside of the confessions would not demand a verdict of guilty, to give in charge to the jury at least the substance of section 1031 of the Penal Code of 1910.
Judgment affirmed.