118 Ga. 274 | Ga. | 1903
Miley was found guilty, under Penal Code, § 673, of giving a mortgage on personal property held by him under a conditional bill of sale. He claimed that when he bought nothing was said about reserving the title; that he signed the note without reading it,' being at the time drunk (though the seller had nothing to do with giving him the liquor) and in ignorance of the fact that title was reserved; that his credit was good; that he had bought other property on the same day from another party without security or reservation of title; and that he mortgaged the property to Ashley in good faith, and with no intention to violate the law. It appeared that the note was long, and in fine print; defendant claiming also that his eyesight was bad, and that he “did not have his spectacles ” when the paper was signed. The jury, after being out some time, returned to the court-room and asked the judge to charge them again as to the effect of defendant’s ignorance that title had been retained; whereupon he instructed them as follows: “If you believe that the defendant was ignorant of the fact that the title to the property was reserved in the seller, then you should look to the evidence in the case and see whether there was practiced on the defendant by the prosecutor any fraud, or whether there were any other circumstances connected with the transaction that would excuse his ignorance.” Error is assigned on this charge, and also on the failure of the court to instruct the jury that “if you believe that the defendant was ignorant of the fact that title to the property was retained in the seller, then you should find him not guilty-”