43 Ga. App. 428 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1931
The indictment in this case charges that William
It clearly appears from the brief of evidence that on January 7, 1931, some person or persons raised a window of the place of business of the Borne Manufacturing Company, entered the building, and stole therefrom a large portion of the articles set out in the indictment, and that said company recovered $135 worth of the stolen goods. C. E. Warren testified, in substance, that he was a police officer of the City of Borne; that about two days after the theft a person told him the stolen goods were on West Sixth street; that witness went to defendant’s place at Five Points, but did not find any of the stolen property there; that witness found the defendant at an old vacant barbecue stand that had been a pressing club, and asked him about the “stuff;” and that witness then told defendant that he knew that the “stuff” was stolen, and that he had information that it was in defendant’s possession. The witness then swore as follows: “He (the defendant) stood there a minute, and said: ‘Well, I hauled that stuff. . . »I drove down to the trestle down here on East First street, and put the boys out with the stuff. . . I know where it is. If you want me to, I will go and get it for you, if you will wait here. . . I rather you all wouldn’t go down there.’ ” Warren further testified that the defendant went with him in his car and directed witness to drive to the first house beyond Five Points; that the defendant said “Stop right here,” and walked up the hill, “kinder looking around;” that the defendant went up the hill and disappeared; and that in an hour or two two boys came in the police station, and said: “Here is that stuff.” G. C. Williams testified, in substance, that late in the afternoon of the day the defendant disappeared, Seab Goodley
The gist of the defendant’s statement to the jury follows: “Edward Lackey and Jess Head . . asked me would I make a trip for them, . . said they wanted me to carry them over to the fourth ward on West Sixth street; and they got in the car and I carried them over there, . . and they got out and said, ‘Wait a minute, we are going back to North Eome;’ and they went in the house and got a croker sack and put it in the car; and they set behind, and I was setting in front driving, and I said: ‘Where are you going?’ and they said: ‘Back to North Eome.’ . . I turned around at the Southern Trestle, where the trestle crosses East First street, and they got out, and I said: ‘What have you got in the sack?’ And they said they had some stuff, and I didn’t know whether they had whisky or not, and they got out and went down that river. And so, the next evening, I think it was, Mr. Warren came up and said he wanted to get that package; and I said: ‘What package? I haven’t got no package.’ And he said: ‘Yes, you have; I am talking about that package that Jessie Head and Edward Lackey had.’ And I said: ‘Yes, sir, I know where that is; it’s down under the trestle.’ . . I thought he was going to arrest me, and I got out of the way. And I seen Mr. Seab Goodley, and sent him down there on the river bank where the boys had put the stuff, and he got it and went back down there to the police station with it. So far as me knowing anything about any stolen stuff, I don’t'know anything about it; but those boys got out and said they had some stuff, and they went down towards the river, and I saw where they hid the package down there.” W. H. Warren, recalled for the State, testified that the place where the defendant took him to get the stolen goods was a quarter of a mile from the place where the defendant had said the other two negroes carried them.
Special ground 2 of the motion for a new trial complains that the court expressed an opinion as to what had been proved, in the following charge: “In this ease, under the law applicable and
Under the foregoing authorities,' we think that the court erred in charging the jury that under the testimony in the case and the
The other special grounds of the motion for a new trial disclose no reversible error and present no question that is new or interesting. Of course, we do not pass upon the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.