The jury might well have acquitted the defendant upon the testimony in this case, but we are unable to declare that there is no evidence of his guilt. We admit that some of the testimony was not of a very satisfactory character and might be denominated as slight, but the evidence, taken as a whole, was sufficient for the consideration of the jury, and we are not permitted to interfere and set aside the verdict in such a case. Indeed, we are expressly forbidden by a provision of the Constitution of many years’ standing, and a most wise and wholesome one, from doing so. This is a court for the correction of errors in law. In this case we would not disturb the verdict if we had the power, as the trial was presided over by an eminently fair and able Judge, who, we are sure, was careful “to safeguard the rights of the defendant. The Judge below receives a better impression of the true *484 merits of a case than we possibly can do, who do not see and bear the witnesses and are not able to observe the other incidents of the trial. lie is, therefore, the'proper one to determine whether the verdict is against the weight of the evidence or not.
AVe cannot reverse the ruling of the Court upon the sufficiency of the evidence, unless we overrule several cases decided by this Court, which we are unwilling to do. The witness George ETuttz testified that he knew the defendant and had known him for two months; that, while it was dark when the assault was committed, he “got a glimpse” of him just after the pistol was fired, a second only intervening, and that he “thought” it was and “took it to be” the defendant, the latter being only fifteen feet from him at the time. ITis father stated that, while his vision was obscured by the fact that he was looking from a lighted room, his store, into the darkness without, and it was almost impossible for that reason to recognize a person, yet he “threw his eyes around” immediately after the firing of the pistol and saw a person whom he “took to be” the defendant, and he also saw a pistol in his right hand, or something that looked like one. He further stated that the defendant ran in the direction of the Climax Hotel, though it appeared that this was not in the direction of his home. It.seems to us that this testimony is as strong as that which, in
State v.
Lytle,
As to the motive being an important circumstance or link in the chain of evidence, .it was not necessary, it is true, to show a motive for the shooting, but it became a most relevant fact, and one of much weight, in ascertaining the identity of the defendant.
State v. Adams,
No Error.
