44 Ga. App. 635 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1932
The special presentment in this case charges Miles Wiley, Mary Wiley, and Henry Wiley with burglarizing the dwelling house of Elbert Wingfield on May 8, 1931, and taking therefrom certain articles of personal property belonging to said Wing-field. Mary pleaded guilty, and a jury found Miles and Henry guilty. Miles Wiley excepts to the judgment overruling his motion for a new trial containing the general grounds and certain special grounds.
From the State’s evidence it appears that Elbert Wingfield’s dwelling house, which was unoccupied and nailed up at the time, was burglarized, and that, at no great time thereafter, some of the articles taken from said house were found in the manual possession of Miles Wiley. The defendant introduced evidence to the effect that he was away from home when the burglary was committed, and had no part in it. His statement to the jury was as follows: “I went off, and when I come back home the things were there, and she told me her grandmother gave them to her. I left Easter Monday and staid in Sandersville, and then went to Carlton. When I got back she told me her grandmother give her the things.” We will state in this connection that the defendant was referring to his wife, Mary, who assumed the responsibility of taking the missing articles, and denied that either Miles or his father, Henry, had any part in the taking.
It being exclusively the province of the jury to pass upon the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the evidence, the strength of the defendant’s alleged alibi, and the effect of the defendant’s possession of the articles stolen from the burglarized house, this court is constrained to overrule the general grounds of the motion for a new trial.
Special ground 1 complains of the following charge of the court: "If you find that the offense alleged in the indictment was. committed by -some one, and that very soon thereafter the whole or any part of the goods so taken at the time the offense was committed, if any offense was committed, was found in the ’recent possession of the defendants, such possession, if not satisfactorily explained
The second special ground complains of the identical charge quoted in the ground next above. The contention is that “the possession of the stolen property recently after the alleged burglary was committed, would only be a circumstance for the jury to consider in determining whether or not the defendant was the burglar, whether or not the defendant committed the burglary, not that ‘some one’ committed the crime.” Obviously there is no merit in this contention. See authorities cited, and note the charge in the Coley case, supra.
The principal contention in special ground 3 is that the court did not, without request so to do, charge the jury that it-was for them to determine whether the defendant’s explanation of his recent possession of the stolen articles was satisfactory. The court charged the jury correctly upon the question of “recent possession,” and if the accused wished any other or further instruction on that subject,
Judgment affirmed.