127 Ga. 36 | Ga. | 1906
David Scbane and Samuel Goldstein were separately charged, in the recorder’s court of the City of Atlanta, with “failing to make proper reports as a pawnbroker, that is, failing to report the purchase of a double-barrel shotgun on June 25, 1906.” The purport and intent of the charge was that the accused had violated section 1610 of the Code of the City of Atlanta, which section, so far as it applies to the present case, reads ás follows: “All pawnbrokers, second-hand dealers, and auction houses shall furnish to the chief of police, or chief of detectives, a full and complete list each day of every article taken in pawn or bought by said dealers, giving a full description of the same,” etc. “And any such dealer refusing or failing to furnish such list . . shall pay a fine of not more than two hundred dollars, or be imprisoned thirty days, or both, in the discretion of the court; and a conviction of any such pawnbroker or other dealer of a violation of this ordinance shall work an immediate revocation of the license of such
In our opinion, the petition for certiorari should have been sustained. The evidence' wholly failed to show that Sehane, at the time that he was charged to have committed the offense, was a pawnbroker. It showed that he was merely a clerk in the “Viaduct Pawn-Shop,” of which one Eosenthal, who had recently died, had been the proprietor, and which, at the time of the alleged offense, was being conducted by Goldstein for his wife, who was the daughter and, according to his testimony, the sole heir of the deceased Eosenthal. It is true that Langford, a city detective, testified that “Goldstein and Sehane run the Viaduct Pawn-Shop,” but this evidently was a mere conclusion of his, for immediately thereafter he testified that he did not know who owned the shop, or whether Sehane was a mere clerk in it. So his testimony on this point was really not at all in conflict with the testimony of ■Goldstein and the statement of the defendant, Sehane, that Sehane was simply a clerk in the pawn-shop. Goldstein, while testifying, upon being asked by the court, “who the proprietor of the Viaduct Pawn-Shop was,” replied, “Mr. Eosenthal who was the proprietor had just died, and his (Goldstein’s) wife was Mr. Bosenthal’s daughter and sole heir; so he was taking charge of the store;” and when the court asked him “what this defendant, Sehane, was doing there,” answered “that this defendant was only a clerk.” And the defendant Sehane, in his statement, said that he had “been working for the Viaduct Pawn-Shop as a clerk on a salary, and nothing more, for the last six or seven months.” The mere
Judgment reversed.