122 Ga. 138 | Ga. | 1905
(After stating the facts.) After instructing the jury on the subject of breaking as an element of burglary, the court, in the charge, said: “ To illustrate what I mean, the law does not require that its citizens, in order to protect their houses from being burglarized, should put bars on-their windows and padlocks on their doors, and matters of that sort. The law is, when a man closes the front of his house and goes out of it, if that door is pulled to and fastened only by a bolt that can be turned with the hand, or not bolted at all, but some degree of force is required to open it, that is all the fastening that is needed, so far as the law is concerned, as to that door; and if a door which is fully closed or -a window which is completely closed is pulled open with no greater degree of force than is -necessary to accomplish the opening of that door so fully closed, that is a sufficient breaking to constitute the breaking referred to in the statute.” This was excepted to, on the grounds that it was argumentative, and that the illustration used by the court was not authorized by the evidence. Clearly there was no merit in the exception.
The court instructed the jury fully and correctly on the subject of reasonable doubt, and also gave them the law of circumstantial evidence. The jury were further instructed, that if they
One ground of the motion was the alleged newly discovered evidence of M. Goldman, who made an affidavit that, about the time Cannon’s house was burglarized, a negro, giving his name as N. Scott, came to his place of business and pawned a lady’s watch, which was subsequently identified and claimed by Cannon; that this was a strange negro, and not in fact N. Scott; that affiant knew Henry Scott, and the man who pawned the watch was not Henry Scott. The accused and his attorney made affidavits that they did not know of the testimony of Goldman until after the trial. Upon the hearing of the motion the State introduced the affidavit of J. W. Cannon, in which he deposed that he identified the watch which Goldman had as the property of his (Cannon’s) daughter, which was stolen from his dwelling at the time it was burglarized; that he informed Goldman of the burglary and that the watch belonged to his daughter and had been stolen, and notified him not to dispose of it; that Goldman promised to hold the watch, but shortly thereafter, when affiant went to Goldman for the watch, he learned that it had been disposed of, and he had never seen it since; and that Goldman was in attendance upon the court as a witness when the case was tried, and was readily accessible t& the accused and his attorney. The State also submitted the affidavit of Polly Glover, who deposed that she and the accused were both employed as servants at the house adjoining Cannon’s dwelling, and that the accused was called and known as N. Scott and she had seen him write his name as N. Scott. The
Judgment affirmed.