11 Ga. App. 268 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
The accused was convicted in a municipal court of
The accused may have been, and probably was, a “traveling blind tiger,” but it takes something more to convict than suspicion or the “belief” of the city marshal that the accused had the whisky for an unlawful purpose. The police were overzealous and sprang the trap too soon. The next time, with the exercise of a little more patience, they may bag the game. The prohibition law encourages generosity. One may give, but not sell his neighbor whisky. Many cities have passed ordinances designed to discourage the possession of whisky for the purpose of sale. Frequently the unlawful purpose can be shown only circumstantially, but when an actual sale or attempt to sell can not be shown, the circumstances proved must be so inconsistent with innocence as to exclude every other reasonable hypothesis than guilt. They were not strong enough in this case. Judgment reversed.