116 Ga. 592 | Ga. | 1902
Riggins was indicted for the offense of being accessory before the fact to the crime of simple larceny. The specific charge is, “ that the said Charley Riggins, . . being absent at the' time of the commission of the crime, did procure, counsel, and command one Charley Hill” a certain mule described and of a named value to unlawfully take and carry away “with intent to steal the same.” The accused was put on trial, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty. He made a motion for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence, which being overruled, he excepted. The evidence tended to show the following as the facts relating to the charge made against the accused: It was admitted that Hill had been indicted for the larceny of the mule, and had been tried and convicted. Adolphus Riggins, the owner of the mule, testified as to the larceny from his stable; that- some time afterwards he ascertained, through information furnished by Hill, where the mule was, and secured its return. A witness, Rosa Saylor, said that just before the mule was stolen she saw Hill and the accused together at the house of the latter, and heard them talking, and that Hill said he was going to get the mule; that this was the night the mule was stolen; that after that Hill asked the accused where the mule was, and the accused told him that it was in Dolph Riggins’s stable; that subsequently Hill got a bridle and went off, and the next day Dolph Riggins was looking for his mule, and the accused helped him to hunt for it. Hill was introduced as a witness for the State, and testified that Riggins asked him if he would go and sell the mule, which he finally consented to do; that he was instructed by the accused to sell it for the best obtainable price, and that the first he saw of the stolen mule was when he was at the house of the accused and came out in the yard, and the accused had it out there
One who is guilty of the commission of a crime as principal in the first degree commits an entirely distinct offense from that of an accessory before the fact, and one indicted as an accessory can not be convicted on evidence proving him to be “ present aiding and abetting at the fact.” 1 East’s P. C. 352 ; Leach’s Crown Law, 515. In the case of Hately v. State, 15 Ga. 346, it was ruled that “ He who procures, counsels, commands, or incites his clerk or agent to commit a crime, in his absence, is guilty as an accessory before the fact, and can not be convicted upon an indictment which charges him with -having jointly, with his clerk, committed the offense as principal.” In other words, one who counsels, commands, or procures another to commit a crime, but is absent at the time of its-commission, is not a principal, and can not be convicted as such. In some of the States the distinction has been abolished, and many decisions can be found which seem somewhat to confuse the principle upon which the distinction between the two offenses rests; but in the cases which have come under our observation where this is
tJudgment reversed.