5 Ga. App. 70 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
E. W. Grow, the plaintiff in error, was convicted in. the city court of Miller county of the offense of simple larceny, it being alleged that he stole three rolls of wire fencing, of Lyons’ make, from one L. Cowart, the prosecutor. Upon the trial the prosecutor testified, that he lost three rolls of wire fencing, Lyons’ make, from a car-load of wire which he received during the summer of 1907; that he had hauled a portion of the car-load to his father’s (A. Cowart’s) place, and a portion of it to J. G. Powell’s store, and left three rolls of it on the railroad right of way, near the depot and near J. S. Bush’s warehouse; and that he found the three rolls of fencing on the defendant’s place on. the creek one day while he was hunting for convicts. He knew that J. G. Powell had let the defendant have four rolls of wire, from the wire left at Powell’s store, and that those four rolls had been paid for. Witness found the four rolls around the defendant’s field, along the road, and found the other three rolls on the back side of the defendant’s place, next to the creek. He spoke to the defendant about the matter one day, between Fudge’s store and the court-house, and the defendant denied having more than four rolls. Witness offered to take him out in a buggy and show him that he had seven rolls, instead of four, but he refused to pay for more than four rolls. Witness had been hunting for the wire four or five months before he found it. A. J. Cowart testified, for the State, that he had not sold the defendant any wire fencing at all, and that he had not authorized him to get the three; rolls in question at the depot, as he did not even know that they were at the depot. J. G. Powell testified, that he sold the defendant four rolls of fencing, and that the defendant paid for it,, but he did not sell him the wire fencing at the depot.
In behalf of the defendant his driver testified, that he hauled three rolls of wire fencing from the depot for Mr. Grow (the defendant), that, Mr. Grow gave him an order which he carried to Mr. Cowart’s store, and Mr. Cowart told him that he had sold all the fencing that he had at the store, but that he had three rolls; at the depot, and asked the witness to go by the depot and get it;, and that he (the witness) gave the order to Mr. Cowart and got, the three rolls of wire from the depot., Another witness testified, that Mr. Cowart and Mr. Grow had some words in Mr. Grow’s, law office about an account for lumber and wire; that Cowart
In the first ground of the amended motion for new trial, complaint is made that the court erred in refusing to allow the witness Walter Williams to testify that he carried to A. J. Cowart a written order, signed by R. W. Grow, on A. J. Cowart for three rolls of wire fencing at the depot in Colquitt, Georgia, and refused to allow the witness to state, the contents of said writing. The court refused to permit this testimony, upon the ground that the original writing had not been accounted for. It appears from the record that, prior to this ruling, Walter Williams had testified that he delivered the order in question to A. J. Cowart, and that A. J. Cowart had instructed him to go to the depot and get
Upon the motion for new trial, the defendant introduced the ¡affidavits of H. S. Sutton and T. W. DeBary, and asked another hearing, upon the ground of newly discovered evidence as set forth in said affidavits; and we think a new trial should have been granted upon this ground. The whole issue in the case turned upon the question of intent. That the three rolls of wife fencing, described in the accusation, and which belonged to the prosecutor, had been taken by the defendant and were in his possession was not denied. The only question was, whether he had bought them or had stolen them.. The evidence tending to show the defendant’s guilt was wholly circumstantial, and necessarily must be sufficient to exclude every other reasonable hypothesis than that the intent of the defendant was to steal. If the defendant sent the order for the wire fencing, and upon that order it was furnished him, he is clearly innocent. If he sent no order
Though this evidence may be in some sense impeaching, as related to the testimony of A. J. Cowart, who says he received no such order from Grow, it is not necessarily wholly impeaching. It is a circumstance newly discovered which throws light upon the intent of the accused, regardless of whether the testimony of Mr. Cowart should be impeached or not. For even if Mr. Cowart’s testimony be true, that Williams never delivered him any such order, still, if Grow gave this order to his agent and directed him to deliver it to Cowart, and obtained the wire fencing upon the order, in ignorance of the fact that his driver had not delivered the-order, he could not have had any intent to steal. He would have presumed that the order was delivered, and that he had purchased the wire fencing in question. And the newly discovered evidence of Sutton is more than cumulative, because the language employed, “the three rolls of wire fencing” indicates a previous, bargain, in which the three rolls of wire fencing had been separated and identified. As well said by Judge Lewis, in Fellows v. State, 114 Ga. 233 (39 S. E. 885), “although newly discovered evidence may tend to establish the truth of a material contention, in direct support of which testimony was introduced at the trial, such evidence is not merely cumulative when it relates to a particular fact concerning which no witness had already testified.. Thus, where in a criminal trial the defense was alibi, and the-accused introduced witnesses who testified that on the day of the-commission of the crime they saw the accused in a county other than that in which it was perpetrated, he being on that day, according to the testimony of some of them, at one place in the county to which their testimony related, and, according to the-testimony of others of them, at other places therein, and, according to the testimony of all, too far from the scene of the offense-to have been possibly present at the time of its perpetration,, newly discovered testimony of still another witness, which placed the accused, in the county where the other witnesses located him on the day in question, at a different hour and place from any
In the present case testimony was introduced tending to show an intent to buy, and not an intent to steal. But the witness Sutton testifies to two distinct circumstances, tending, like those introduced, to establish an innocent intent^ but not previously testified to by any witness. It appears that Sutton moved to Albany a short time after the transaction involved in this case, and that ordinary diligence would not have ascertained the facts related by him; and his character for truthfulness and veracity is properly vouched for. The case, upon the point of intent, depends entirely upon circumstantial evidence, from which the guilt of the defendant may gravely be doubted. We, therefore, think that the court erred in not granting a new trial. Judgment reversed.