50 Ga. App. 419 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1935
Shivers and Cox, half brothers, were jointly indicted under two counts, the first count of the indictment charging burglary, and the second count charging the offense of receiving stolen goods. The jury returned a verdict of guilty on the first count, and the defendants assign error on the overruling of their motion for a new trial.
The evidence shows that the store of Willis-Pause Company was burglarized and certain goods stolen therefrom; that about a month later some of these goods were found in a basement room of the residence of defendant Shivers, which was then occupied by defendant Cox, and some of the goods were found in the possession of parties to whom Cox had sold them. A portion of the goods so found were handled exclusively by Willis-Pause Company and some had Willis-Pause Company revenue stamps on them. Approximately $500 worth of goods were stolen, and approximately $175 worth
There is no merit in the general grounds of the motion for a new trial. The burglary was proved, and the recent possession by both defendants of some of the goods stolen at the time of the burglary was shown. The defendants’ explanation of their possession was not satisfactory to the jury. Eeed, from whom Shivers claimed to have bought the goods, was never produced or accounted for. It is no unusual defense for one found in possession of stolen goods to claim that he bought them from some fictitious person, adding enough detailed description to try to make it appear valid. The defendant Shivers, according to his contention, looked at the goods on the street where many people were passing, yet none of them were produced to testify to seeing them. He said that he paid the alleged Eeed openly in the store on a Saturday, where many people were congregated, yet no witness was produced to testify to seeing the transaction or hearing the conversation that took place. Even the mechanic who testified that he was offered a box of cigars in payment for work on the automobile did not state that Eeed was the man who made the offer, or that he knew anybody named Eeed, or that the load in the automobile and under the tarpaulin was composed of the goods stolen,1 or that they were the same goods
The first special ground of the motion for a new trial assigns error on the following charge of the court: “In connection with the charge of burglary as contained in count 1 of the indictment, I will give you .another principle of law for your application to the facts in the case, if you find the facts are applicable to it. If you find that a burglary was committed as charged in the indictment, and that recently thereafter the defendants or one of them were found to be in possession of some of the articles which may have been stolen at the time of that burglary, then I instruct you that that possession would be a circumstance from which you would be authorized to convict, unless the defendants make an explanation of such possession which is consistent with innocence in your opinion.- I think that is the law of burglary.” The first objection to this charge is the use of the words “may have been stolen” instead of the words “were stolen.” While it must be conceded that in a case of burglary where the guilt of the accused depends upon the recent possession of stolen property, the identity of the property found in his possession with the articles stolen must be established beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the use of the word “were,” in
Movant further contends that the following portion of this charge, to wit: “If . . the defendants or one of them were found to be in possession of some of the articles which may have been stolen at the time of that burglary, then I instruct you that that possession would be a circumstance from -which you would be authorized to convict, unless the defendants make an explanation of such possession . • . ,” is erroneous “in that it places a burden upon the movant who was not found to be in possession of some of the property stolen in the burglary to explain the possession of the other movant of such stolen property.” There is no merit in this contention, because there was no dispute as to who was in possession; the controlling issue being how possession was acquired. It was not necessary to prove possession of all of the goods stolon. Shivers admitted that he was in possession of some of the goods, and claimed to have bought them from one Need and later moved them to the basement of his residence where Cox slept. Cox admitted that he got possession of them from Shivers and sold some of them to different persons. So far as an explana
The third attack on this excerpt from the charge is that the court said: “You would be authorized to convict, unless the defendants make an explanation of such possession which is consist tent with innocence in your opinion” (italics movants’). Plaintiffs in error contend that this meant that the movants must be entirely innocent of any charge whatsoever, whereas it was only necessary that the explanation “be sufficiently reasonable and satisfactory to show that the movants were, not guilty of the offense of burglary.” To this construction we can not agree. In the beginning of the paragraph complained of the court said: “In connection with the charge of burglary as contained in count one of the indictment, I will give you another principle of law for your application to the facts in the case, if you find the facts are applicable to it. If you find that á burglary was committed as charged in this indictment, and that recently thereafter the defendants or one of them were found to be in possession of some of the articles which may have been stolen at the time of that burglary,” etc. (italics ours). The entire paragraph related to the charge of burglary, and in the light of what immediately preceded the phrase “consistent with innocence,” it is a-pparent that the court meant innocence of the charge of burglary, and the jury un
The second special ground of the motion for a new trial alleges that the court failed to instruct the jury that it was only necessary that possession of stolen property be explained to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury. In the absence of a proper written request for a more specific charge on this subject, this principle was sufficiently covered by the court’s instruction that “possession would be a circumstance from which you would be authorized to convict, unless the defendants make an explanation of such possession which is consistent with innocence in your opinion." (Italics ours.) If tlie explanation is consistent with innocence in the opinion of the jury, it would be “to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury.” In Tarver v. State, 95 Ga. 222 (21 S. E. 381), Morris v. State, 5 Ga. App. 300 (63 S. E. 26), and Mayfield v. State, 17 Ga. App. 115 (86 S. E. 284), cited by plaintiff in error, there was an “entire failure” to charge on the explanation of the possession of the stolen property. Yet in all of these cases the reviewing court, in speaking of the explanation of the possession, used the same language that the trial judge used in the instant case, to wit, “consistent with innocence.” In Temples v. State, 18 Ga. App. 510 (89 S. E. 600), the court said: “Under the facts of this case there was no error in the following charge to the jury: ‘I charge you that where property has been shown to have been stolen, and shortly thereafter the same property is found in the possession of the defendant, in a criminal case, the jury may draw an inference that the defendant is the guilty party, unless the defendant explains his possession, if found in possession of such property, to the satisfaction of the jury,—that his possession was innocent rather
Putting the usual and ordinary construction, rather than a strained one, on the charge of the court, we find no error of commission or omission that would mislead the jury. The evidence authorized the verdict, and the court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.