151 Ga. 21 | Ga. | 1921
The evidence against the accused, Viola Johnson, is insufficient to support the verdict. The facts found in the evidence, of an incriminating character, are so brief that they may be appropriately stated herein. The body of the deceased was found on a railroad-track, with the head completely severed and showing other evidences of violence, The State offered the testimony of a deputy sheriff, to the effect that John Sharpe (who had already been convicted of participation in the crime) stated to the witness, in the presence of this defendant, who was being held in jail charged with the homicide, that he and this defendant were called from their home at night by Charlie Irwin and Sarah Shelly, a sister, of the accused, and led a short distance, where the defendant or Sarah Shelly (Sharpe, according to the witness, being unable to state positively which) called the deceased from his home, when Irwin struck or cut the deceased and robbed him of his money, after which his bodjr was carried by Irwin and Sarah Shelly a short distance to a railroad-cut and thrown upon the track; and that this defendant had neither affirmed nor denied the statement made by Sharpe, although told that she might do so. Sharpe was not introduced as a witness. The State offered evidence to the effect that the deceased lived about one hundred yards from the point at which the body was found on the railroad-track; that a trail led from a point within a few feet of his home to the railroad; that on the morning after the homicide the footprints of a man and woman were found on the right and left, respectively, of this trail, going towards the railroad; that there were indications of some object having struck the bank of the railroad-cut at one point between the top and bottom, and of its having been dragged from the bottom of the cut to the point at which the body was found on the track; that the accused occupied a room in a house located within about thirty feet of the railroad, and John Sharpe occupied the only other room in this house; that in the very early morning of the da3r following the homicide Sharpe was seen coming out of the. railroad-cut where the body of deceased was found; and that on the same day clothing belonging to Sharpe, stained with blood, was found under a bed in the room occupied by him, and at the same time an underskirt having a bloodstain slightly to the rear, on the right-hand side near the bottom hem was found in a trunk in the room of the accused. The accused in her statement claimed that the under
Reversed.