8 Ga. App. 673 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
The defendant was convicted of violating the general prohibition law. It is unnecessary to say that the evidence-in behalf of the State was amply sufficient to authorize the conviction of the defendant; for the general ground of the motion, that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, was practically abandoned
Furthermore, the language employed by the judge in this ease does not involve the statement of a fact. The judge does not say that Smiley Hatcher did not bring any whisky back with him, nor even that the testimony was that Smiley Hatcher did not bring any whisky back with him. The language used was “the statement made relative to Smiley Hatcher not carrying any whisky back with him.” By using the wore! “relative” the judge avoided saying, even by indirection, that Smiley Hatcher had not carried any whisky back with him; because we do not know from the statement what the witness said relative to that point, and he might have said either that he did not carry any- whisky back with Mm or that he did. It appears, from the regord, that at the time of the judge’s remark, the witness had not made any statement as to whether Hatcher did or did not carry whisky- back with him; but this does: