146 Ga. App. 75 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1978
Don Runnels appeals from his conviction of theft by taking. The evidence showed that on May 12, 1977, the victim cashed her paycheck shortly before entering a Big Star grocery store at approximately 4:30 p.m. and had $88 plus some change in a billfold in her shoulder bag. She testified that while shopping she was bumped twice by a male shopper and felt her pocketbook move. Shortly after the second incident, she noticed that her billfold was missing and asked one of the cashiers if she had seen a tall white man who had long dark curly hair and something wrong with his face and was wearing a dark shirt and faded jeans. When she was informed the man had checked out a few minutes earlier, Mrs. Irvin ran outside the store, found her husband who was waiting for her in the car, informed him of the theft, described the suspect, and asked him if he had seen such a person leave the store. Her husband saw a man matching his description leave the
Defendant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss at the close of the state’s evidence because only circumstantial evidence was presented against him and the state has not excluded every reasonable hypothesis of guilt as it is required to do under Code Ann. § 38-109. He claims that the victim discounts the possibility of someone else in the store taking her purse, or that it fell out of her pocketbook by her own actions. Defendant does not argue his alibi evidence on appeal.
This hypothesis fails because of a lack of credible evidence. The victim testified that she had the money when she went into the store, defendant was the only person to bump into her in the store, he bumped her twice, and shortly after the second one she noticed her billfold was missing. She testified that the pocketbook was deep and the only way to get the billfold out was by reaching inside it. Defendant’s assertion that the billfold was stolen by someone else is only a bare possibility not shown by the evidence and is derived by sheer speculation; the victim’s testimony is clear that defendant was the only
Judgment affirmed.