56 S.C. 415 | S.C. | 1900
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The defendant was indicted for, and convicted of, the offense o'f 'horse stealing, and having been duly sentenced, appealed to this Court upon the two grounds set out in the record. Inasmuch as both of these exceptions impute error to the'Circuit Juldge in his charge to the jury, by violating that provision of the Constitution which forbids a Judge froth charging upon the facts, it is due to1 his Honor, Judge Benet, that his charge should be fully set out by the reporter in his report of this case, as it seems to us that the charge fully vindicates itself.
The second exception imputes error to- the Circuit Judge, in using, in his charge to the jury, the following language: “It does not mean, as the counsel for defendant argued to you, that if the man took the horse and rode it off, and turned it loose, you must acquit him; aman can take a horse and tiren turn him loose for a very good reason — because his pursuers are hot after him, and he then turned the horse loose,” which it is claimed “was -charging upon the facts and invading the province of the jury, w'ho are -the -sole judges of the facts submitted to them, without any intimation as to why this particular defendant might have turned this horse loose.” This exception, based as it is upon an isolated extract from the Judge’s charge, cannot be properly understood without looking' at the context — by reading what immediately preceded and what immediately followed the language used in the extract upon which the second exception is based. The Judge after explaining to the jury, in the language quoted in the first exception, the object and purpose of the statute (sec. 170 of Crim. Stat.), making it a misdemeanor for any person to knowingly and wilfully take and use any horse, m-are or mule, without the consent of the owner thereof, and without intent to- steal the same, proceeded as follows: “It is a very proper statute. And if you come to the conclusion that all that this man did was to- take
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.