96 Ga. 349 | Ga. | 1895
I. The defendant was indicted for the offense of murder. The indictment contained two counts, one alleging that the murder was committed by burning up the dwelling-house of the deceased and killing her in the commisson of the arson, and the other count alleging that the homicide was committed with an ax. Upon the trial of the case, the testimony was purely circumstantial, consisting almost exclusively of tracks, and this latter class of testimony was the only character of evidence relied upon to convict the defendant of the commission of the homicide. Upon the trial of the case, a witness called for the State was permitted to testify that in the presence of the defendant he accused him of the commission of the offense, and proceeded with great circumstantiality to detail a supposed set of facts which he stated to be of his own knowledge, and at the conclusion of his statement, stated to the defendant, “You killed her with an ax.” It was shown by this same witness that the defendant immediately denied killing the woman with an ax; and upon cross-examination the same witness testified, that when he charged the defendant with the commission of the homicide, as above stated, he immediately denied all knowledge of it, and denied that he committed the offense in anyway. Upon this state of facts, the court ehai'ged the jury as follows : “The law says silence, when the circumstances require
2. Section 3248 of the code requires the granting of a new trial in all cases where the circuit judge upon the trial of a case expresses or intimates an opinion upon the weight of the evidence. This is a matter exclusively for the jury. In the present case, as has been above stated, the testimony was entirely circumstantial, and consisted to a great extent of comparative similarity between the shape of the track made by a boot upon the defendant’s foot, and tracks found near .the scene of the homicide. There was a peculiarity about the track made by the defendant. There was a similar peculiarity about the track made at the scene of the homicide. The court charged the jury that a mere similarity in tracks alone would not be sufficient to sustain a conviction of the defendant, unless there was a peculiarity about the track. The effect of this charge was a direct intimation to the jury, but presumably wholly unintended, that if there was a peculiarity about the track, then mere tracks would be sufficient to justify a conviction. The vice of the instruction consists in telling the jury at all what evidence would be sufficient to convict. Upon this point, jurors are not required to consult the court, nor is the court authorized to give them the benefit of its advice. They are the exclusive judges of the evidence. They are the ministers chosen of the law to deal with these questions of fact. The evidence is sufficient whenever there is enough of it to generate in the mind of the jury a belief beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused. If it falls short of generating in their minds this degree of
Judgment reversed. ■