We will discuss only tbe proposition announced in the second headnote. The prosecutor, a white man 37 years old, suffering from no physical infirmity, hired a horse and buggy, with the view of being carried from Adairsville to the home of a Mr. Hall, some seven miles away in the country. The defendant, a negro boy, was sent along as driver. As they were leaving the town the defendant asked that another negro boy, Jim Gardner, who appeared by the roadside, might be allowed to go along in order to be company for the defendant on his return trip that night. The defendant sat in Gardner’s lap. The prosecutor was drinking and had some packages of liquor in the buggy. As thejr went along, all three of them drank of the liquor. After dark, and before they arrived at Hall’s place, the prosecutor, so he testified, felt Gardner reach in his (the prosecutor’s) side pocket and remove his pocket-book and money. He made no resistance, said nothing; but when they arrived at their destination he called Hall out to the buggy and -asked him to search the boys, stating that they had robbed him. The defendant was first searched and then Gardner. The purse and money were found on the seat under Gardner’s person. In explaining why he made no resistance, the prosecutor said: “I didn’t know whether they had any guns, or what they had in their pockets; I was afraid of them.” As a matter of fact, the search disclosed that the boys were entirely unarmed. The indictment charged robbery by force and intimidation.'
It seems absurd to call this robbery in light of the elements necessary to constitute this offense at common law and under our decisions; for our Penal Code definition is merely declaratory of the common law. The “force,” in our definition, is the same as the “'violence” of the common-law definition; and the “intimidation” in ours is synonymous with the “putting in fear” in the common law. “The rule is this: if the fact be attended with such circumstances of terror — such threatening by word or gesture, as in common experience are likely to create an apprehension of danger, and induce a man to part with his property for the safety of his person, it is a case of robbery. Fost. 128; 4 Black. Com. 243; 1 Hawk. P. C. 96; 1 Leach, 280; 3 Chitty’s C. L. 803; 1 Russell on Crimes, 879.” Long v. State, 12 Ga. 321. To quote the same decision further (p. 333) : “The rule laid down gives the safest