85 Va. 122 | Va. | 1888
(after stating the case), delivered the opinion of the court.
The single question here is, whether the conviction of the prisoner is warranted by the evidence. In other words, Is the evidence plainly insufficient to support the verdict ? For unless it is, the judgment must be affirmed, according to the familiar rule established by a long line of decisions of this court. Hill’s Case, 2 Gratt. 594; Pryor’s Case, 27 Id. 1009; Coleman’s Case, 84 Va. 1.
Ho evidence appears to have been offered at the trial by the prisoner; and that for the Commonwealth, as certified in the bill of exceptions, is substantially as follows:
The witness, Payne, testifies that on the day mentioned in the indictment, in the night-time, his mill was broken into, and about one bushel of corn-meal and the same quantity of chop was stolen therefrom ; that the meal was in a sack which had a
The next witness, Blunt, testifies that he was present with. Payne at the prisoner’s house, and heard Payne propose to the prisoner to settle the matter, if he would pay for the meal, and that the latter replied he would rather pay for it than to have any trouble in court. The witness also describes the prisoner’s heel-tap as the witness, Payne, does.
The third and last witness is George Chism, the miller, who testifies that, a few days before the mill was broken into, the prisoner went to the mill to get a bushel of corn that he had bought, and that while at the mill, the witness called his attention to the bag of meal afterwards stolen, and asked him if he could carry it. The prisoner answered he could, and the witness then said, “ well, when you come after it, bring a bag, for that one has a big hole in it.” This remark was made in jest, and no other fact is testified to by the witness.
This evidence, which is all the evidence in the case, is not sufficient to warrant the verdict. The principal point relied on by the Commonwealth to connect the prisoner with the offense is, that the larger tracks found in the road, leading to and from the mill, were made by him. But however probable it may be, in view of the correspondence between the heel-tap on the prisoner’s left shoe and the impression made by a heel-tap on the ground, which is described in the record, that the tracks were his, the fact is not established with the clearness and certainty required by the law in such a case. There was no comparison of the measurement of his shoe with the tracks, and notwithstanding the correspondence between the heel-tap on the shoe and the impression on the ground just mentioned, his shoes and the tracks may have differed widely; nor can we say, upon this record, that they did not. To warrant the conviction of a person accused of crime, every fact necessary to establish his guilt must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt; and especially is this so where, as here, a conviction is sought upon cir
The additional circumstances relied on by the Common ivealth, namely, that the prisoner, when told to hold up his left foot, first held up his right foot, and when asked to make tracks to be compared with those found in the road, refused to do so, and his subsequent declaration that he would rather pay for the meal than to have any trouble in court—while they increase suspicion against him, do not constitute such proof of guilt as to warrant his conviction of a felony. Nor is much weight to be attached to the jesting remark of the witness, Chism, made to the prisoner before the offense was committed. The fact that when the meal was stolen it was emptied from the torn bag in which it was, is, at most, but a slight circumstance in the case, especially in view of the fact that a quantity of chop was stolen at the same time, which, while it shows that the thief went prepared to carry away the fruits of his crime, lessens the presumption that the condition of the bag was previously known to him.
Besides, there is no proof that any meal was found in the possession of the prisoner, much less that the articles stolen were traced to his possession and identified; so that the case of the Commonwealth rests upon little more than mere conjecture. In short, to use the language of the court, speaking by Moncure, P., in Johnson’s Case, 29 Gratt. 196, the circumstances proved, “ taken singly or all together, while they create a suspicion of guilt, are yet inconclusive and wholly insufficient to prove such guilt. They are consistent with the fact of guilt, but are also consistent with the fact of innocence. If they be not at least as consistent with the fact of innocence as with the fact of guilt, they certainly do not amount to such degree of proof as to connect the accused with the offense and to warrant his conviction
The judgment must therefore be reversed, and the case remanded to the county court for a new trial.
Lacy, J., dissented.
Judgment reversed.