The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an indictment for statutory arson, i. e., the burning of a barn. Mr. McNair, who for the purposes of this case was the owner of the barn, had a lawsuit with the father and sister of the defendants. There is evidence that the defendants were offended with Mr. McNair as the result of the lawsuit. The suit was about a mule which Mr. McNair took from these relatives of the defendants. One of, the defendants is said to have remarked that the mule would do Mr. McNair no good. One of the defendants is also said to have remarked that he would not be surprised if a barn should be burned and he be accused of it. The very night of the day upon which the case was determined the barn was burned. The tracks of three people were discovered near *442 the place where the barn had been burned. Dogs were put on these tracks. These dogs wént to where one of the defendants was under arrest. The other defendant rode up to the place where a crowd was assembled, and when he got on the ground the dogs went up to him. The witness who was in charge of the dogs testified that the dogs told him that these were the men they had been tracking. The defendants were convicted with a recommendation to mercy. From this judgment of cqnviction, the defendants appealed, with eight exceptions. The third, fourth, fifth, sixth and eighth exceptions include matters of fact with which this Court cannot deal, and they are overruled. The remaining exceptions raise three questions:
(1) Did his Honor err in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendants at the close of the State’s testimony?
(2) Did his' Honor err in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendants at the close of all the testimony?
(3) Did his Honor err in admitting the evidence of the conduct of the dogs in following the,tracks?
“The weight of modern authority is undoubted to the effect that all the elements constituting the corpus delicti *443 may be proven by circumstantial evidence. The corpus delicti in a case of murder consists of two elements, the death of a human being, and the criminal act of another in causing that death.”
. In the case at bar we have only the first requisite, to wit, a burned barn. There is not a single circumstance to show that it was the result of the criminal act of another. There are only three things that can, by any possibility, be claimed as circumstañces : (a) Tracks; (b) statements of the accused showing enmity; (c) the actions of the dogs.
(a)The peculiarities were not described, and the prosecuting witness said there was nothing peculiar about them. The evidence as to identity of tracks goes out and may be disregarded.
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“After a track is 18 or 20 hours old, I don’t like to fool with it; you can do very well up to 15 hours.”
The person relying upon the testimony must show that the dogs were within the- period of efficiency, and the State failed utterly to do so. Mr. McNair saw the fire at between 10:30 and 11 o’clock on the night of the 18th, and the dogs did not come until 2 :45 p. m. on the 19th. The shortest time puts the dogs within the period of unreliability. The testimony was inadmissible on this ground also.
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Questions 2 and 3 have been considered under question 1.
The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the case is remanded to the Court of General Sessions for an order of discharge, unless they be held upon some other charge.
