15 Ga. App. 487 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
C. E. O’Neal, alias Pat O’Neal, was tried under an accusation charging him with adultery and fornication, and with living in a state of adultery and fornication with one Evie King, he being a married man and the said Evie King being a single woman. The jury found a general verdict of guilty. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial on the general grounds alone; and to the order overruling the motion he excepted.
According to the evidence for the State, Evie' King, a widow and a lewd woman, lived with her children about three miles away from the home of the defendant. He was a married man, engaged in the business of enlarging pictures. On many occasions he was seen by different witnesses at her house. One witness testified that she (the witness) daily drove her calves to a pasture near Evie King’s house, and, when going for the calves, saw the defendant at the house several times about sundown, and that she “would again see him there the next morning, just after sunup,” when carrying the calves back to the pasture; that she saw him there several times in the summer, bareheaded and in his shirt-sleeves, but did not know whether he spent the night there or not, as she saw him there only in the daytime; that on one occasion she went to the house when Evie King’s baby was born, and while Evie King was confined to her bed, in the year 1914, and the defendant was there and no one else, when the witness arrived; that the defendant left before the witness did, and as he took his departure he gave Evie King some money and told her that this amount “would keep her until he could get back, and that when he came back again he would bring her some more money.” Another witness testified that on one occasion, while the defendant was being conveyed around by him in a buggy, collecting for pictures enlarged for various people, the defendant got out of the buggy near Evie King’s house, “right at the end of the lane in front of her house, and went towards her house,”
It is true that “to warrant a conviction on circumstantial evidence, the proved facts must not only be consistent with the hy
The case under consideration may easily be distinguished on its face, in various ways, from the three cases above discussed. In the Long case it did not appear that the woman had an established reputation for lewdness, whereas in the present case it appears from the testimony of a number of witnesses, and without denial on the part of the defendant in his statement or on the part of the woman Evie King in her testimony, that her character fox lewdness was unquestionably established; and the testimony shows that he was in her exclusive presence at the house on one occasion at least, and was seen there on numerous other occasions. In the Moore case it appeared that adult sons of the defendant lived in the same house with him and his wife and the lewd woman, and it did not appear that he was ever alone in the house with the woman. In the Thompson case it appeared that other men frequented the house, and there was no evidence of improper conduct between the defendant and the lewd woman he had engaged as a housekeeper, nor was there any special thing to indicate that the defendant was the recipient of her favors. In both the Thompson and the Moore cases the defendants had rational explanations of the presence of the lewd woman in their homes, for the women were there as hirelings, rendering necessary and legitimate services, in the .one case as a housekeeper and as a nurse to the sick wife of the accused, and in the other as a housekeeper and in caring for the defendant’s young and
In cases of this character it is generally impossible to have direct evidence as to the actual commission of the crime, since such crimes are seldom ever committed upon the housetops, in the market-places, or. elsewhere in the gaze of the public, but nearly always witli stealth and secrecy; and hence, while there are not different rules of evidence for this crime than for another, the courts have recognized the doctrine as sound and safe, where the evidence discloses, that, a man was so associated with a- woman or in such a .position with her at a particular time as that, according to all ordinary human experience, sexual intercourse between them would naturally follow,-a conviction therefor might be 'sustained,‘notwithstanding the circumstances do' not -absolutely compel the conclusion that he was guilty; and especially is this true where the woman is of loose character, as in this case: ■ In'short, a knowledge of -ordinary human conduct, under circumstances tending 'to indicate the guilt of one accused of adultery or fornication, is considered as supplying to
In Sutton v. State, 124 Ga. 815-820 (53 S. E. 381), the Supreme Court said: "It is seldom that the act of adultery or fornication can be proved by direct evidence. Usually it must be established by circumstantial evidence or inferred from a chain of circumstances proved. Whichever form the proof may take, it is sufficient if the offense is proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Among tbe circumstances from which it has been held that guilt may be inferred is where the proof shows that a married man associated with a known prostitute. . . Or when a married man is seen to enter a house of-prostitution and is known to be in the room with a common prostitute for a sufficient time to commit the act, adultery may be inferred. . . Of course these circumstances are subject to explanation, the jury ultimately determining what was the fact.” It is true that in the case of Lightner v. State, 126 Ga. 563 (55 S. E. 471), where the defendant, a white man, traveling with his child and a mulatto woman, whom he claimed to be his nurse, spent several nights at residences on the way, and on two occasions the three slept in one room, and on one occasion there were two beds in the room and both beds appeared the next morning to have been occupied, and on another occasion there was but one bed, while a pallet was made before the fire for the woman, since the defendant said he preferred that she occupy the same room with him and the bab3r, a conviction was set aside on the ground that the evidence only afforded room for suspicion, since there was no direct evidence showing criminal intercourse between the defendant and the woman, and the circumstances were not such as to exclude every other reasonable hypothesis than that of the guilt of the accused. But in that case it will be observed that there was no proof that the woman was a prostitute, and in fact she may have been one whose age and long service in the family of the defendant may have negatived the probability of illicit relations between them. Also, the defendant in that case, as in the Moore and Thompson cases, supra, assigned a rational reason why he carried the woman around with him and why he occupied the same room with her, since he claimed that she was employed to take care of his infant child, and her presence at all times in the room with the baby may be reasonably assumed to have been necessary.
Judgment affirmed.