124 Ga. 784 | Ga. | 1906
Dock Horseford was tried and found guilty of the offense of assault with intent to rape. He moved for a new trial, on the general grounds that the verdict was contrary to evidence and without evidence to support it, and was contrary to law, etc. A new trial was denied, and he excepted. The substance of the material evidence submitted in behalf of the State was as follows: The female alleged to have been assaulted was twelve years old. At the time of the alleged assault, three or four o’clock in the afternoon of a day in April, she was at her father’s house, which was situated about-twenty-five yards from the road and two hundred and fifty yards from her father’s mill, where the accused knew her. father and grandfather were at the time. Her mother had gone to the home of the girl’s grandfather, about half a mile away, and the accused also had knowledge of this fact. There were woods extending from near the house where the assault was alleged to have been committed to near the mill, and a path leading through them to the mill. There were present at the house where the girl was alleged to have been assaulted her sister, eleven years old, and her baby brother. The age of the accused was not shown, but it appeared that he wore a number eight or nine shoe, and one of the
While the evidence was, of course, sufficient to have authorized a verdict for assault, or assault and battery, we do not think it warranted a conviction of assault with intent to rape. The essential elements of the last-named offense are, (a) an assault, (&) an intent to have carnal knowledge of the female,- and (c) a purpose to carry into effect such intent with force and against the consent of the female. Dorsey v. State, 108 Ga. 477. And before a conviction can be legally had, there must be no reasonable doubt, from the facts and circumstances proved, of the existence of any one of such necessary ingredients of the crime. Gaskin v. State, 105 Ga. 631; Dorsey v. State, supra. When we consider that the assault occurred in broad daylight, in front of a dwelling-house which was in close proximity to the road and near the mill, where the accused knew that the father and grandfather of the girl, and, as the evidence shows, a neighbor also, were .at the time; that the sister of the girl assaulted was in close proximity to her and must have been seen by the accused; that he lived in the same neighborhood, only about a mile away, and was well known to both of the girls; that he left his corn and mule at the mill, where the girl’s father was, and doubtless expected to return there for the meal and the mule; that he merely caught the girl by one of her legs, and that, too, it seems, after he had been discovered under the planks on which she was sitting; that he said nothing at all and did nothing more, but ran off as soon as she jerked loose, and returned to the mill, where he knew her father and grandfather were, for his meal and mule,— we say, when these facts are taken into consideration, a very grave doubt necessarily arises both as to the intent of the accused to have
Judgment reversed.