A. P. Feagin, Sr., appeals his bench trial conviction of criminal trespass asserting insufficiency of evidence.
The alleged victim, Gleason Fowler, claims appellant interfered with Fowler’s right of use of a road giving access to the northern portion of his property, by barricading it and driving spikes into the ground. The trail meanders on both appellant’s and Fowler’s property. Appellant denied he drove spikes into the ground and asserts that he did erect barricades across the road, but only within the boundaries of his own property, after detecting the unauthorized dumping of garbage upon his land.
The criminal trespass accusation avers appellant did “knowingly and without authority enter upon the premises of another person, to-wit: Gleason Fowler ... for an unlawful purpose, to-wit: to drive metal spikes into the private roadway of . . . Gleason Fowler.” (Emphasis supplied.) Held:
1. On appeal the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to support the verdict, and appellant no longer enjoys a presumption of innocence; moreover, an appellate court determines evidence sufficiency and does not weigh the evidence or determine wit
*461
ness credibility.
Grant v. State,
2. OCGA § 16-7-21 pertinently provides: “(a) A person commits the offense of criminal trespass when he intentionally damages any property of another without his consent and the damage thereto is $500.00 or less or knowingly and maliciously interferes with the possession or use of the property of another person without his consent” and “(b) A person commits the offense of criminal trespass when he knowingly and without authority ... (1) Enters upon the land or premises of another ... for an unlawful purpose ... (2) Enters upon the land ... of another person . . . after receiving, prior to such entry, notice from the owner, rightful occupant, or, upon proper identification, an authorized representative of the owner or rightful occupant that such entry is forbidden; or . . . (3) Remains upon the land or premises of another person . . . after receiving notice from the owner, rightful occupant, or, upon proper identification, an authorized representative of the owner or rightful occupant to depart.”
In
Ross v. State,
*462 During bench trial the court observed that “[u]nless you have [a] survey, I don’t know ... on whose property [the road is] on [at any given point].” And at the close of the hearing, even though this was a criminal trial, the court announced the following findings: “[T]hat the pathway is on both properties and that the victim . . . does have an easement of wild property by prescription. . . . And so the [c]ourt is going to say that by using that for 20 years [the victim] has developed an easement into [appellant’s] property. So the [c]ourt will find you guilty of criminal trespass.”
Appellant asserts most persuasively, inter alia, that the evidence is insufficient to establish the existence of an easement by prescription in favor of Gleason Fowler. Pretermitting this question, however, is the fact that the accusation avers only one manner in which the offense of criminal trespass was committed, and that is by the appellant entering the premises of Gleason Fowler, for the unlawful purpose of driving metal spikes into the private roadway of the said Fowler. The accusation does not aver multiple means of crime commission, nor does it aver the commission of criminal trespass by the means prohibited by OCGA § 16-7-21 (a). Rather the accusation avers acts of trespass which would be criminal under OCGA § 16-7-21 (b), and which require as proof thereof that appellant in fact entered the premises of Fowler for the unlawful purpose therein averred.
There exists no probative evidence that appellant entered the land of Fowler to drive metal spikes; the hearsay evidence offered to show that appellant drove the spikes, even if admissible, failed to show the alleged unlawful act occurred on Fowler’s property. Fowler did testify that appellant put some files in the road, without being required to testify as to the source of his knowledge; however, as to this particular testimony, Fowler failed to state, and the record does not otherwise establish, that these acts occurred on land other than appellant’s.
Both Fowler and a deputy sheriff testified they observed a cable pulled across the trail, and Fowler testified that one end of the cable was tried to a tree located upon his property. Nevertheless, there is no evidence establishing that this act or acts occurred either when appellant entered Fowler’s land after having been told not to do so or that he remained thereon and committed the act after having been given notice to leave. In fact, Fowler made an admission in open court that prior to the occasion testified to by the deputy sheriff he “hadn’t been able to contact” appellant. Although the barrier apparently continued to be maintained after Fowler objected in the presence of appellant, the record does not establish that it was maintained thereafter upon any part of Fowler’s property. Moreover, the maintenance of a “barrier” was not averred in the accusation as the means in which the criminal trespass was committed. Thus, proof of the offense in *463 this “wholly different” manner would constitute a fatal variance within the meaning of Ross, supra.
Likewise, it would constitute a fatal variance to prove that the offense was committed by the unaverred and “wholly different” manner of impairing Fowler’s use of an easement by prescription by appellant’s acts of driving spikes or maintaining a barrier upon his
own
property. See
Ross,
supra. As in
Bowman v. State,
This case is distinguishable from
Strozier v. State,
This case is also distinguishable from
Kerr v. State,
Judgment reversed.
