153 Ga. 556 | Ga. | 1922
The Court of Appeals certified to the Supreme Court the following question for instructions thereon: “ Where a person is legally arrested by an officer in one county and carried by the officer into another county, can the arrested person be lawfully convicted in the latter county for carrying a concealed pistol in that county, when he had the pistol concealed on his person in the county where he was arrested, but the pistol was not discovered by the officer until the person had been taken into the other county ?”
• The statute which makes the carrying of a concealed pistol a misdemeanor declares that “ Any person having or carrying about his person, unless in an open manner and fully exposed to view, any . . pistol . . manufactured and sold for the purpose of offense and defense, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” Penal Code, § 347. It is also declared in a statute of this State (Penal Code, § 31) that “A crime or misdemeanor shall consist in a violation of a public law, in the commission of which there shall be a union or joint operation of act and intention, or criminal negligence.” “A crime consists in something more than the commission of an act. There must be a union of act and intention.” Owens v. State, 120 Ga. 296 (48 S. E. 21). There must not only be an act done which is forbidden by Jaw, but there must be operating in addition to this and in the act itself an intention to violate the law. And to render one liable to prosecution in a particular county, the act must have been committed in the county in which the trial for the offense takes place (unless there be a change of venue, according to the statute made and provided in certain cases). If one, arrested in the county of Douglas by an officer having authority to malie the arrest, is carried by the latter into the county of Cobb, he is in a certain sense subject to a vis major; though, of course, that expression is usually applied to an irresistible natural cause. And it can not be said of a person having a concealed weapon about his person and carried by the