170 Ga. 810 | Ga. | 1930
Walter Eeynolds was indicted for the murder of John Mincie by shooting him with a gun. He was tried, convicted, and sentenced to be electrocuted. He made 'a motion for new trial on the usual general grounds. Subsequently he amended his motion by the addition of one ground.
The evidence relied on by the State for conviction is purely circumstantial. From the evidence it appears that on the night of the homicide the house of the deceased was burned a few minutes after eleven o’clock. A crowd soon gathered. The plaintiff in error in this statement emphatically denied the commission of the crime.
Mr. Turner, on whose place the defendant lived, testified as follows : "At the time that this happened this defendant, Walter Reynolds, was working for Mr. Alwood. Mr. Alwood came to me some time prior to that, and said that he needed a head-block setter, and asked me if I had one that I could spare him; and I told him that I had, and sent Walter Reynolds to him. I think he carried Walter there; anyway I told Walter to go. He did not want to go to work for Mr. Alwood, when I called him to go to work for him. He
The evidence did not authorize the verdict.
The sole special ground of the motion for new trial complains that the court erred in not giving a more comprehensive charge on the law of circumstantial evidence. The court charged Penal Code (1910) § 1010, on the subject of “circumstantial evidence, when sufficient;” and the complaint is that this section, when read to the jury, does not fully instruct them on the rule of circumstantial evidence ; that the average juror does not know the difference between a “hypothesis” and a “hypothenuse,” and a charge in the language of the code, that, “To warrant a conviction on circumstantial evi
It was error to refuse a new trial.
Judgment reversed.