72 Fla. 97 | Fla. | 1916
—The plaintiffs in error and Press Godwin and Jack Vann, alias Jack Harrell, were indicted by the grand jury of Bay county for the larceny of a “heifer of the bovine species,” alleged to be the property of Watts Gainer, on the third day of August, 1915. At the trial which was held in November, 1915, the jury returned a verdict of guilty as to Marcus and Emmett Pate and Press Godwin, and not guilty as to Jack Vann, alias Jack Harrell.
The motion for a new trial contained five grounds. The first four embrace the proposition that the verdict was not justified by the law or evidence, and was contrary to the charge of the court. The fifth ground was based upon newly discovered evidence recited in the affidavits filed with the motion, and which were asked to be taken and considered as a part of the motion. There are four assignments of error, the second of which is abandoned. The last assignment of error rests upon the order of the court overruling the motion for a new trial in so far as that motion challenged the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the guilt of the defendants beyond a reasonable doubt.
The evidence upon which the State relied for conviction was entirely circumstantial. The testimony adduced at the trial as to the circumstances which appear to have had any relation to, or bearing upon, the charge was not uncontradictory in character, the witnesses not being able to agree on many of the facts constituting the co-called chain of circumstances.
The defendants and their wives, Jack Vann or Harrell and, three children, and a negro man constituted a party of nine, which on the afternoon of Thursday, August 12, 1915, having left their homes some miles away, upon a fishing trip, encamped in what was known as the “Fishing Woods” between Big and Littl í Island Ponds, in Bay county. The party came in two wagons, one wagon drawn by two mules and the other by a horse, and en
Sometime during the day of the Wednesday following, which was August 18th, 1915, two men named Alex Morrell and A. R. Wells being in the vicinity of Big Island Pond, discovered the hide, head and feet of a “yearling” buried in the ground near a log; a little distance away the entrails of the animal had been buried. The witnesses said the animal seemed to have been butchered at that spot. Nearby were the tracks of a wagon and two mules which came from a southerly direction, went-to the northward, turned around the “butchering ground” and went in a southwest direction to level ground. They followed the wagon track for about three quarters of a mile to where the track entered the road about forty yards from the camp. The witness Morrel said the “wagon tracks were about 2j4 inches wide,” evidently referring to the width of the tires upon the wheels. The witness Wells said the “wagon tire was about an inch and a half, something like that.” The witness Morrel said that the hide was in a state of decay, “the hair slipped off of it easily.” The color of the hair showed that the animal was “red sided.” The witness spoke of it as a “Frosted yearling,” and that it was marked with a “swallow-fork in one ear and crop, split and under-bit in the other,” and he could not swear whether the hide was that of a male or female. The witness Wells said the mark was a “crop split and under-bit in one ear and a swallow-fork and over-bit in the other,” and in his judgment the animal was a “heifer.” At the camping ground where the defendants had camped these witnesses found some beef bones, they appeared to be fresh. In one side of the neck of the hide
When circumstantial evidence is relied upon by the State for conviction, the circumstances taken together must be of a conclusive nature and tendency, leading on the whole to a satisfactory conclusion and producing in effect a reasonable and moral certainty that the accused and no one else committed the offense charged. It is not
We think that the evidence in this case did not measure up to the standard approved by this court in the cases cited. The evidence of ownership of the animal alleged to have been stolen is by no means certain and clear. The hide which was found had no brand upon it, although the alleged owner said his cattle were branded with the leter “G.” The ear-marks upon the ears of the animal whose hide was found were different from those in which
The witnesses in this case were permitted without ob
The wagon tracks which were followed from the assumed “butchering ground” to the road near the defendants’ camp were shown by one witness to have been made by wheels carrying tires 2% inches wide, but by another witness the State showed that the tires were one and a half inches wide “something like that;” but the width of the tires on the defendants’ two mule wagon were not shown.
About a quart of fresh beef bones were found on the camp ground; as these could not have been all the bones from the carcass of the “yearling” bovine about
Circumstances shown in evidence in a trial of this character may be suspicious, but suspicious circumstances alone are not sufficient to support a verdict of guilt. They must not only be consistent with the theory of guilt, but must exclude every other reasonable theory before the jury on such evidence is warranted in returning a verdict of guilt. See authorities cited above.
We think that the verdict should have been set aside and a new trial awarded. The judgment is, therefore, reversed.
Taylor, C. J. and Shackleford, Cockrell and Whitfield, JJ. concur.