7 Ga. App. 812 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1910
Johnson was convicted of a violation of the act of 1903 (Acts 1903, p. 90), commonly known as the “labor-contract law;” and his motion for a new trial being overruled, he ex-
The accusation contains two counts, the first charging Johnson with fraudulently obtaining from the prosecutor the $60, and the second count charging him with fraudulently obtaining the $5. The prosecutor testified, that on December 19, 1908, Johnson quit work and went to the house of his mother, and he (the prosecutor) went to hunt for him, and found him at her house, and he then told the prosecutor he was sick and unable then to resume work. Under this evidence the solicitor abandoned the first count. We think justice would not have been seriously wounded if he had also abandoned the second ■ count. The State’s testimony shows several reasons indicating that the prosecution was without probable cause, and that the conviction was manifestly unwarranted. In the first place the prosecutor states that the laborer had done “good and faithful service” for him under the contract, for a full period of eleven months, and during this entire time he had advanced $65, and owed him under the contract $99. It is true that the prosecutor states in an indefinite and general way that the defendant owed him $15 or $20 when he quit work, more than his wages for the year amounted to; but it is significant that he does not state the time when he advanced him an additional sum, or the amount of the advance, if any, and that he failed to include
In the second place, if the defendant was sick when he quit work, that was a good reason for his quitting; and there is no evidence that he was not sick as he stated. The prosecutor found him at his mother’s house, and he then told the prosecutor that he was sick and was not able to resume work. The defendant’s sickness constituted a good and sufficient reason for his not working under his contract. Mobley v. State, 4 Ga. App. 78 (60 S. E. 803).
Altogether we are clearly of the opinion that the conviction was without evidence to support it, and therefore was contrary to law.
Judgment reversed.