11 Ga. App. 265 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
The plaintiff in error, a negro boy, fifteen years of age, was convicted of the offense of burglary, and was sentenced to seven years in the penitentiary. His motion for a new trial was overruled, and he brings error. The transcript of the record is very confusing and involved, and this court has found some difficulty in gathering from its careful perusal what actually occurred on the trial. In so far as we have been able to determine from this record, there is only one error which is of such serious character as to require the grant of another trial. The evidence against the accused consisted of several slight circumstances indicative of guilt, and, standing alone, would probably not have been sufficient to have produced conviction in the mind of the jury beyond a rea
This' testimony was clearly inadmissible as evidence against the accused. “The confession of one joint offender or conspirator, made after the enterprise is ended, is admissible only against himself.” Penal Code (1910), § 1035. This is but a codification of a well-settled rule of law. Reid v. State, 20 Ga. 681; 1 Gr. Ev. (16th ed.), § 184 (a).
Another occurrence which the record shows took place at the. trial, while not in itself sufficient to warrant the grant of a new trial, inclines us all the more readily to grant another trial, because it probably may have resulted in injustice to the accused. After the evidence had been closed and the argument begun, the State asked permission to reopen the case for the purpose of introducing another witness. This witness testified that on the night of the alleged burglary he saw the accused and this accomplice together. The attorney for the accused objected to the reopening of the case, but, of course, this was a matter in the discretion- of the court. After this witness had testified, the attorney for the accused asked the court to postpone the trial for a short time, in order that he might have an opportunity of sending for a witness, whom he named and located, by whom he could rebut the testimony of this new witness. The court refused to give him the