1. Counsel for the State moved to dismiss the writ -of error, on the ground that the plaintiff in error had not paid the costs, nor, in lieu thereof, made an affidavit in accordance with the statute. There is an affidavit by the plaintiff in error, properly ■entitled, attached to the bill of exceptions, in which the affiant makes oath “that he is, because of his poverty, unable to pay the cost in •said case.” This affidavit fully complies with the requirements of the statute. Counsel for the State relied on DeLoach v. Richards, 94 Ga. 730, but the ruling there made is not in conflict with what is here held. That case, as was stated, in Barnes v. State, 105 Ga. 830, is incorrectly reported. The record thereof of file in this court shows that the affidavit there in question conjunctively stated that the affiant was unable to pay the costs and give security, thus failing to affirmatively show that he was unable to pay the costs.
2. The accused objected to the testimony of the prosecutor, that he drew a draft on his factors for the sum of ten dollars and gave it to the accused, on the grounds, that the accusation charged that the accused procured ten dollars in money from the prosecutor, and "this charge could not be sustained by proof that a draft for ten dollars was so procured; and that the draft, being in writing, was the highest evidence of its contents. The first objection would have •been meritorious, if the State had offered no evidence to show that the accused procured the money for which the draft called; but as the prosecution introduced such evidence, the objection was without merit. While the charge in the accusation that the accused procured from the prosecutor ten dollars in money could not be sus--tained by mere proof that he procured from the prosecutor a draft for ten dollars, j^et if this evidence was followed by proof that the .accused had the draft cashed, this would be equivalent to his procuring the money from the prosecutor. In State v. Palmer, 40 Kan. 474, the indictment charged that, the accused obtained money under false pretenses. The proof was that he obtained a check, which was •cashed out of money deposited in bank by the drawer of the check. It was held that there was no variance between the charge and the proof. Similar rulings were made in Dimick v. People, 117 N. Y. 13, and Adams v. People, 25 Colo. 532(2).
*2213. Whatever merit there was in the other objection to the evidence in question, the accused lost the benefit of the objection when he subsequently admitted, in his statement to the jury, that he had. procured “the draft” from the prosecutor, clearly referring to the* draft described by the prosecutor in his testimony, as this was the-only draft which had been mentioned or alluded to in the case.
4. The evidence did not warrant a verdict of guilty, and the court,, for this reason, 'erred in not granting a new trial. As was said in Glenn v. State, 133 Ga. 585, before one can be lawfully convicted of a violation of the statute upon which this accusation was based,, there must be proof of a distinct and definite contract for service. No such contract was proved in the present case. The charge in the accusation was, that the accused did contract with the prosecutor to perform service as a laborer for him, with intent to procure money and not perform such service, and did thereby procure from the prosecutor ten dollars in money, and after procuring the money did not perform the labor as contracted, to the loss and damage of the prosecutor, etc. It is therefore clear that, in order to make out the case, the State had to prove that there was an existing contract-at the time the accused procured the ten dollars from the prosecutor j for the accused, after having procured the ten dollars, could not-contract with the prosecutor with intent to procure it. We must-look, then, for the contract upon which the accused procured the-money, to what occurred before or at the time that the prosecutor gave the accused the draft for ten dollars. Upon this subject the prosecutor .testified as follows: “On the 39th of November, 1903, this defendant came to my place and wanted to borrow from me the sum of ten dollars, and he wanted to cut boxes for me and work for me after Christmas.” The accused “agreed that if I would let him have the ten dollars he would come back after Christmas and work for mé. I did not have the ten dollars . . ; so I drew a, draft on my factors and gave to him for the sum of ten dollars. . . The defendant was to cut boxes for me after Christmas, and do work, too, during the year on my turpentine place.” What, thén, was the agreement -or promise of the accused upon the faith of which he obtained the draft for ten dollars from the prosecutor?' It was that he would come back after Christmas and work for the-prosecutor on the latter’s turpentine place. At what time after .Christmas he was to come back and work for the prosecutor was not *222stated. I-Iow long he was to so work was not disclosed. How he was to work, whether by the day, by the week, by the month, or by the year, or whether he was to be paid according to the amount of work he should do, is left by this evidence to mere conjecture. So, too, it is utterly impossible from this testimony to ascertain what wages, if any, the accused was to receive for his work. The contract, if such there was, was indefinite as to the time when service thereunder should begin, indefinite as to the time'during which such service should continue, and wholly silent as to the compensation which should be paid for such service. Even if, by a strained construction of this testimony, it could be inferred that the accused was to work for the prosecutor until the debt contracted for the loan of ten dollars should be discharged, there is absolutely no way of ascertaining how much work, in time or quantity, the accused was to do in order to discharge this indebtedness, for the contract discloses no measure of compensation by which to estimate the value of his work. The accused did come back to the prosecutor’s place after Christmas, and work thereon; by cutting and cornering turpentine.boxes. This is all that he expressly agreed to do. Whether the work which he did was, as to time or quantity, sufficient to comply with the contract, interpreted as above indicated, can not, for the reasons given above, be ascertained from the testimony. It is true that the prosecutor sought, by his own testimony, to show that the accused did not perforin his contract, by testifying that the work which the accused did for him, less the amount of rations which he got to live on while at work, amounted to two dollars and fifty-seven cents; but how or where the witness got the measure of value by which to estimate, in money, the work done by the accused does not appear. He certainly did not get it from anything that ■appears in the agreement between the parties, and it does not even appear what was the market value of the work done. Of course the mere statement by'the prosecutor, in his testimony, that, the accused had never completed his contract is of no probative value whatever, being a mere conclusion of the witness. The question whether the accused completed the performance of his contract was for the jury, and not for the witness. The statute involved in this case provides, that if any person shall contract with another to perform for him services of any kind, with intent to procure money or ■other thing of value thereby, and not to perform the service con-*223-tractecl for, etc., he shall be deemed a common cheat and swindler. A criminal statute must be construed strictly. It is clear, therefore, ihat, before there can be a lawful conviction -under this statute, the •evidence must show a contract for service which is so distinct and •definite as to its terms that nothing essential is left to be supplied by mere inference or conjecture. When the contract relied on is for •a term of service which the parties have left indefinite and unascer--tainable from their agreement, it is insufficient to support a prosecution under this statute.
Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur.
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.