182 So. 78 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1938
After a careful reading of the evidence in this case and an attentive consideration thereof this court is of the opinion that the conviction of the two appellants was improperly had thereon. The scintilla rule has no application in a criminal case, and the cursory evidence upon which the conviction was rested barely afforded even a scintilla as to guilt. It appears to this court that the verdict and judgment in this case was, of necessity, predicated upon evidence that did not rise above the dignity of conjecture, suspicion, and guesswork. It is true that the alleged injured party testified that he lost several hogs, but there is nothing in his testimony tending to show that his hogs were feloniously taken and carried away, and the law requires that this fact must affirmatively appear from the evidence. In his testimony witness Kelly made no attempt to connect these appellants with the disappearance of his hogs, and stated, "my feelings towards these two boys are all right." The evidence further discloses that some time subsequent to the alleged disappearance of Kelly's hogs, these two defendants sold seven head of hogs in Ariton at a hog sale held in that town. This fact was without dispute. In this connection, however, the defendants gave evidence tending to show that the hogs they sold were their own property and strenuously denied that any of them were hogs that Kelly had missed. There was no testimony adduced to show that either of the hogs sold by them were of like description to the Kelly hogs.
At the conclusion of the State's evidence, the defendants moved the court to exclude same and discharge the defendants, on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to convict them. The court overruled the motion, to which action exception was reserved. The court also refused to defendants the affirmative charge requested in writing. There are numerous exceptions to the rulings of the court throughout the trial, but the two questions above stated are the principal grounds insisted upon to effect a reversal of the judgment of conviction from which this appeal was taken. *230
As to the scintilla rule, above mentioned, see Ex parte Grimmett,
In our case of McMickens v. State,
In the absence of proof as to the elements of the corpus delicti, which, as stated, include (1) that the alleged property had been feloniously taken and carried away; (2) by the accused, there can be no conviction of larceny. 36 C.J., par. 483, pp. 899, 904, and cases cited.
As stated in Winslow v. State,
In support of this insistence we have been cited the case People v. Wallace,
We cannot undertake to set out at length the evidence in this case, but, as stated, we have examined it with painstaking care, and are satisfied that, taking it as a whole, it does not fairly and reasonably permit of inferences of the guilt of the defendants, and is not sufficient to make out a prima facie case, and hence should not have been submitted to the jury. The question of whether there is any evidence of guilt is not a question for the jury, but is one for the court; and no trial court can submit a criminal case to a jury when there is no proof of guilt, without committing reversible error. It is against public policy to allow such convictions to stand, and for this reason the law does not allow an accused person to be convicted of a felony, or other crime, except in the form and manner prescribed by law. *231
The court erred to a reversal in overruling defendant's motion to exclude the evidence and discharge the defendants. There was also error in refusing to defendants the general affirmative charge requested in writing. Other insistences of error are presented but need not be considered, they not being necessary to the conclusion here decided upon and announced.
Reversed and remanded.