42 Ga. 221 | Ga. | 1871
This was an indictment for burglary, tried in Chatham Superior Court, in which these two plaintiffs in error were found guilty as accessories after the fact; and the case presents two points for the adjudication of this Court. Eirst, whether the indictment charges sufficiently in law the offense; and secondly, whether the evidence sustains it; and we may add, thirdly, whether the charge of the Judge was a proper statement of the law in this case.
The indictment charges Loyd and Ward with being accessories before the fact. Its language is: “And did then and there unlawfully, burglariously, and feloniously incite, move, conceal, help, and procure, aid, abet, and command the said John Quarterman to do and commit the felony,” etc. Under this indictment, several witnesses were introduced who testified as to the burglarious taking of some cotton which' was traced to the place of these parties and there found; but there was no evidence that they concealed the crime from the magistrate, and harbored, assisted and protected, etc., the person charged with the crime as principal. The Judge charged the jury: “As an isolated fact, the receiving of sto
Again, he charged the jury: “ That if they found, from the evidence, that the defendants concealed the crime from the officers of the law, or harbored the defendant, Quarter-man, to prevent his arrest, then, in contemplation of law, they were accessories after the fact.” This was error. An accessory after the fact is a person who, after full knowledge that a crime has been committed, conceals it from the magistrate and harbors, assists, or protects the person charged with or convicted of the crime. The language of the Court was “concealed the crime from the officers of the law or harbored.” The language of the law is, “ conceals it from the officers of the law and harbors,” etc. In the second branch of the charge of the Judge below, he uses the words, “and afterwards received the goods, knowing them to be stolen, it would authorize them to convict, as accessories after the fact.” In the opinion we entertain of the law, and as this case comes before us on a motion in arrest of judgment and for a new trial, no matter what may be our personal opinions of the criminality of the parties, inasmuch as it involves their liberty, we are constrained to give the parties the exact measure of their legal rights; and we hold that, in this classification of the offense, both at common law and under our statutes, the law contemplates some assistance or act done to the felon himself, and is distinct from the crime of receiving stolen
Judgment reversed.