delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is аn appeal in error from a conviction of driving an automobile on a public highway while under the influence of an intoxicant. T.C.A. sec. 59-1031. It is urged the evidence preponderates against the finding of guilt and in favor of the innocence of plaintiff in error.
Evidence for the State was that on Februаry 10, 1960, about 3:20 A.M., State Trooper James Wall saw standing on the side of the highway (U.S. ALA) an automobile, its front partly in the ditch and its rear extending about a foot over the surface of the road right-of-way. On investigation it proved to be plaintiff in error’s car, and he was in it, drunk, asleep at the wheel. The key was in the ignitiоn but was turned off. The clutch was broken so the car could not move by its own power.
The officer hаd the car towed in to a garage, and arrested plaintiff in error, took him to jail, and brought this *77 chargе against him of driving while drunk. He did not see him driving the car and had no direct knowledge of his having driven it. Such was the evidence for the State. Plaintiff in error offered no evidence.
He insists that the evidence failed tо make out a case of driving while drunk; that, instead, it showed he was not driving but the car was standing still; and that “driving,” within the sensе of the statute (59-1031) prohibiting the driving of a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or nаrcotic drugs, means such vehicle must be moving on a public highway or street.
He relies on
Line v. State,
Though not driving at the moment of the collision, he was “driving” till his motor stopped a few minutеs before, and it might well have been said this was a “driving” which would support the charge. Indeed, such a view was taken on similar facts by the author of the Line opinion in his concurring opinion in the later case of
Bradam v. State,
Referring to this in a later case, Mr. Justice Burnett pointed out that “the Bradam case weakеns, to a great
*78
extent, what was said in the Line case.”
Hester v. State,
In
Hopson v.
State,
After discussing the Hоpson case and its circumstances warranting a conclusion of guilt, the Assistant Attorney General, with сommendable candor, says: “The State feels that to attempt to reach the same conclusion from the set of facts in the present case would be leaving entirely too much to cоnjecture when dealing with the liberties of an individual.”
The Court, however, is unable to share this view of the evidеnce. It is true no man is to be deprived of his rights upon conjecture; and it is often difficult to draw the line between conjecture and legitimate inference. The test is furnished not by law but by logic and common еxperience; and it is satisfied when the basic facts proved warrant the conclusion that the ultimate fact or proposition in issue asserted by the proponent is the more probable hypothesis.
Bryan v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
It is true a greater degree of proof is required in a criminal case than in a civil case; that in the later a preponderance suffices, while in the former guilt must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt; that is, the circumstances must exclude every other reasonable hypothesis *79 than that of guilt. That is a rule for the Trial Court. Bryan v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., supra.
In the case before us, we think the circumstances warranted the trier of fact in inferring’ guilt beyond а reasonable doubt. The car was found on the road after midnight; it was plaintiff in error’s car; he was in it, drunk аnd asleep at the wheel; it must have been driven on the road to the point where it was found; in the absence of anything to suggest that this might have been done by someone else, it is reasonable to infеr that it was done by plaintiff in error; and, in view of his intoxication, that it was done under the influence of the intоxicant.
The rule for review here differs from that on the trial below. There, the accused was prеsumed innocent; but the judgment and finding of guilt displaced the presumption of innocence, raised a presumption of guilt, and put upon plaintiff in error here the burden of showing the evidence prepоnderates against guilt and in favor of his innocence.
Mahon v. State,
The rule governing our review of the facts is the sаme whether the finding of guilt is based on testimonial or on circumstantial evidence.
Ford v. State,
Upon such a review, we think that plaintiff in error has failed to show that the evidence preponderates against thе finding of guilt and in favor of his innocence. The assignment of error is overruled and the judgment below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
