120 Ark. 148 | Ark. | 1915
The defendant, Albert Earnest was convicted of the crime of burglary, and appeals to this court from the judgment of conviction. The charge in the indictment is that he, together with one Jamie Oliver, broke and entered the storehouse of D. B. Speer in the town of Tinsmian, Calhoun County, Arkansas, with intent to commit grand larceny, and did then and there commit the offense of grand 'larceny by stealing merchandise consisting of three coats and six pairs of trousers, of the aggregate value of thirty-nine dollars.
The proof shows that the articles .alleged to have been stolen were found, shortly after the burglary, in a hollow log about ia half mile from Tinsman. One Bruce Harper gave information to the deputy sheriff as to the place where the stolen goods could be found, land confessed that he, together with Oliver land the defendant, had committed the burglary. Hairper was introduced as a witness by the State and testified that he land Oliver and the defendant burglarized the house and stole t'he goods. He stated also that in addition to the articles mentioned in the indictment some bolts of calico were stolen and taken away by the defendant, and that the defendant stated that he was going to secrete the same under a certain church house. The bolts of calico were not found.
The other circumstance relied on is that a day or two after the burglary was committed, and ¡after Harper had been ¡arrested, the defendant remarked to one of the witnesses that some one had been watching his house, ,and showed some anger at the insinuation thereby implied that he had something to do with the burglary. He also stated to the' "witness, when Harper was arrested and was about to be taken away, that he wanted to sec Harper. We do not think that these circumstances were sufficient to amount to substantial corroboration. They were entirely consistent 'with defendant’s innocence. It was not unnatural for defendant to comment upon the fact that he was being watched in a way which cast an imputation as to his connection with the burglary. Nor was it any evidence of guilty participation in the crime that he showed anger or irritation at the implied suggestion of his connection with the crime. These circumstances ¡are too weak, we think, to be treated as corroborative testimony of a substantial nature. We are therefore of the opinion that the verdict of the jury was not supported by sufficient testimony.
"We are asked, to enter a judgment of dismissal here, but we lare unwilling to do that for the reason that the prosecuting attorney may have discovered additional testimony in corroboration of the alleged accomplice.
The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.