8 S.E.2d 699 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
The circumstances of the buying of the recently stolen cow found in the defendant's possession, which he had purchased from a stranger on a public road, and the failure or refusal of the defendant and his witnesses until the trial of the case, although given an opportunity to do so, to disclose the circumstances under which he had bought the stolen cow, and to give the name of the person from whom he claimed he had bought the cow, authorized, but did not require, the jury to find that the testimony of the defendant's witnesses and the defendant's statement were discredited. This takes the case out of that class of cases where the jury arbitrarily disregarded unimpeached, uncontradicted, or at least not discredited testimony.
It will be noted that the defendant said at the trial that he had bought a cow off a truck on a public road from a stranger whose name he did not state, but that the stranger said he was from Collins, Georgia. His stepbrother said that the stranger gave his name as Bill Heywood, and was from Collins, Georgia. However, the defendant did not disclose from whom he had bought the cow until the trial, and his stepbrother, a few days before the trial, had in effect refused to tell the solicitor-general what, if anything, he knew about the alleged stolen cow, or from whom the accused contended he had bought it. The other witness for the defendant testified that he was present at the negotiations preliminary to the actual sale. We can not but think that under the circumstances the jury had a right to believe that the defendant and his witnesses failed and refused to disclose from whom they claimed to have bought the cow, with the ulterior motive that if the State's offices obtained this information they could check up on its truthfulness, and ascertain whether or not he had in good faith bought a cow from a man by the name of Heywood. The defendant's evidence did not disclose *514
that the State had any opportunity to ascertain the truthfulness of such statement. Indeed, it might have been impracticable to investigate its truthfulness while the trial was in progress and before its termination. We think the circumstances were such as to supply a reason why the jury should not believe the defendant and his witnesses. We do not think this case comes under the rule that the jury arbitrarily disregarded testimony which was wholly unimpeached and uncontradicted, or at least not discredited; for the jury might have considered the concealment of the name of the person from whom the defendant claimed to have bought the cow until the actual trial as discrediting his statement that he had bought the cow in good faith. Gibbs v. State,
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Guerry, J., concur.