49 Ga. App. 248 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
The defendant was indicted at the March term, 1933, of the superior court of Berrien county,- charged with the offense of burglary. The indictment was returned March 20. The case was continued until the adjourned term of said court, held on April 17. Defendant has been confined in jail since a few days after the alleged commission of the crime in November, 1932. The evidence for the State was that the defendant was seen driving around the streets of Nashville, Georgia, in a maroon-colored Chevrolet coach, about 11:30 o’clock at night, with two other men in the car; and that this car was seen to drive to the door of the storehouse burglarized, and remain there some fifteen or twenty minutes. A witness for the State testified that he came by this storehouse while this car was standing there, and that he saw two men coming out of the storehouse, and thought that he recognized one of them as B. F. Lawson. He identified the defendant as being the man sitting in the car, under the wheel. He immediately ran and told the night-watchman and some other men, who also saw the car drive off. The sheriff and the owner of the store were called and it was found that the padlock on the door had been broken and 70,000 cigarettes in cartons taken. The witness for the State testified that he saw several pasteboard boxes in the back of the car when he passed. Two letters addressed to the defendant, one at Bainbridge and the other at Thomasville, Georgia, were found on the ground at the place that night.- The car was identified as being the car belonging to the defendant, and he admitted having been in Nashville that night. His home was in Thomasville.
At the call of the case a motion for a continuance was made, based on the absence of five witnesses, to wit, B. F. Lawson, G. C. Spurlin, Mrs. George Sampson, Dr. James Butler, and Freeman
The court did not err in refusing to allow witnesses for the State to be'interrogated in reference to the size of the stock of
Judgment affirmed.