90 So. 2d 657 | Miss. | 1956
The defendant in the trial court, Thomas Williamson, was convicted of grand larceny upon the theory that he had stolen and carried away the sum of $140, which he was alleged to have taken from the person of the chief prosecuting witness, Will Underwood, on November 23, 1955.
The case of the prosecution rested entirely on circumstantial evidence. The defendant asked for, and was refused, a peremptory instruction which sought to direct the jury to return a verdict in his favor. In his motion for a new trial the defendant assigned as one of the grounds therefor that the court was in error in refusing to grant unto him the peremptory instruction requested. The third assignment of error on this appeal is the action of the trial court in overruling the defendant’s motion for a new trial on the above mentioned and other grounds. But in view of the conclusion that we have reached after a careful examination and study of the testimony, it is only necessary that we deal with this third assignment of error.
The proof disclosed that the defendant, who was employed as a graduate nurse at the East Mississippi Insane Hospital, at Meridian, on November 22,1955, cashed a check in the sum of $200 at a bank in Meridian; and after getting off from work that afternoon about 4 o’clock, he purchased a portable television set and carried it to the home of Jeff Smith, near Quitman in Clarke County, and had the same installed there, since he and his
The chief State witness, Underwood, admitted in his testimony at the trial that he couldn’t walk well and was staggering before he left the mill. Both John Kelly and Jeff Smith were also introduced as witnesses for the State. John Kelly testified that he was about his duties as night watchman and that he did not see Underwood drink any of the moonshine whiskey that Underwood admitted having tasted, and which the defendant testified had been consumed in considerable quantity by Underwood prior to the timé he was staggering about the place where the four men had been engaged in conversation. The State witness Smith corroborated both Underwood and the defendant to the effect that Underwood couldn’t walk well and was staggering about the premises. But John Kelly testified that in his opinion Underwood appeared to be sober when he saw him after making his rounds on the hour as night watchman.
The proof further discloses that shortly before Underwood left the premises, between 2:30 and 3:00 a. m., on November 23, 1955, the defendant left the group of men
It is the theory of the chief witness, Underwood, that his bottle of coca-cola had been “doped”, and he testified when the defendant returned with the four bottles of coca-cola, the bottle cap had been removed from one of them and that the bottle cap had been almost removed from another one; that the witness, Underwood, drank from the bottle of coca-cola from which the cap had been removed, and that immediately thereafter his eyes began burning, he felt funny, couldn’t walk well and was staggering. Kelly was not present at that time, and one of the bottles was sitting on the table for him to drink upon his return upon one of his rounds as night watchman.
However, both the State witness, Jeff Smith, and the defendant testified that the chief witness, Underwood, was staggering about the boiler room in the mill before the defendant ever went off to buy the coca-colas. The defendant testified that Underwood had taken several drinks of the moonshine whiskey, but the latter claimed that he only drank about a teaspoonful thereof. The defendant further testified that after he saw Underwood take several drinks out by the car, the latter left the place where they all had been engaged in conversation and on two occasions went on the outside, and that the defend- and found that almost all of the whiskey had been consumed and that the defendant had only drunk about two swallows of it; that originally there were one full pint and part of another one.
The State witness, Jeff Smith, had left the place where they had been engaged in conversation and went on the outside, but he testified that he did not drink any of the
The State witness Kelly testified that soon thereafter he looked on the outside, saw the defendant getting in his car, that backed up, and then drove about a hundred yards and then returned to the mill; and that he later saw Underwood and the defendant sitting on the side of the road there at the mill, talking. He did not testify that he saw Underwood and the defendant get in the latter’s car, if they did do so.
The chief witness Underwood testified that previously the defendant got hold of him “and shoved me around there in the boiler room some. He says, 'Maybe I can help you around some, maybe you will get over it. ’ * * * I couldn’t walk; I was staggering. He said he was going to take me out to the car and ride around a little over the plant; he wouldn’t take me off the plant. G-oing on out there, I told him I couldn’t leave Jeff by himself, wasn’t nobody else there, * * *. He says, 'Jeff knows you are going, ’ so when we got to the car, he had me hugged up, using his knees, walking with me, helping me along that way. So we got out to the car, and I thought it was my
The State witness Smith and the defendant both testified that while they were in the boiler room, at the place where they had been engaged in conversation, Underwood was staggering around and that they were fearful that he would fall in a chain there and get hurt and they both agreed that he should be given a cup of coffee, and the witness Smith testified that he did fix him a cup of coffee and that this all occurred before the defendant went off to buy the coca-colas.
The defendant denied that Underwood was ever in his car that night, and neither of the State witnesses other than Underwood, claimed to have seen Underwood in the car with the defendant. And the defendant claims that he got in his car alone and went on home.
The chief witness Underwood testified that he didn’t “come to himself” until shortly before he saw Albert Smith at or near Archusa Springs about 3:00 o’clock p. m. on November 23, 1955, which was approximately twelve hours after Underwood is claimed to have left the mill.
The chief witness Underwood further testified on direct examination that when the defendant, gave him the bottle of coca-cola he handed the witness the opener, hnt on cross-examination he testified otherwise.
The person who sold the coca-colas to the defendant testified that he gave him an opener to take with him. Both the State witness Smith and the defendant testified that they each opened their own bottle of coca-cola and that Underwood open his own.
The defendant had attended medical school for two years, was a graduate nurse, and was holding a responsible position at the Bast Mississippi Insane Hospital at the time of the commission of the alleged crime. Several witnesses testified as to his good reputation for honesty and integrity, and no one testified to the contrary as to this reputation. He had been injured by an explosion on an aircraft carrier while in the military service, when thirteen men were killed by the explosion. At that time he sustained a back injury, and his physician testified that he had prescribed for a medicine which was both ‘ ‘ a pain-killer and stimulant, ’ ’ called Hyson. A pharmacist testified to having filled this prescription for the doctor, and at the time of the defendant’s arrest he had two bottles on his person and three other bottles in his suitcase, one of which contained aureomycin. A local doctor at Quitman testified that Underwood was in a state of apathy at the time he saw him during the afternoon of November 23, 1955, and that this condition could be caused either by “ a drug or whiskey, one or the other. ’ ’
The chief witness does not claim to have been conscious of any one unzipping his overalls pocket and removing his billfold therefrom whenever it may have been removed. While he couldn’t walk well and was staggering, he claims to have known what was going on until he
In fact, it is a reasonable hypothesis that he may have lost his billfold during the nearly twelve hours thereafter during which he didn’t know anything. He did not miss it until during the afternoon of November 23, 1955, when he felt for it to see about employing some one to get him out of the woods and back to the Town of Quitman.
The proof is insufficient to show that either the defendant or anyone else actually stole Underwood’s billfold from his person, and he didn’t even remember Avhether or not he had given his money to his wife, and so stated such a theory to his son, after he “came to himself.” His wife accompanied him to the local doctor that afternoon, but it is not clear from his testimony as to the hour when he made the above-mentioned statement to his son in the presence of Alfred Smith. Moreover, there is no testimony that the defendant had any bottles of medicine with him down at Quitman on the night of November 22, 1955, and it was two days or more later before any was found on his person or in his suitcases.
We do not feel justified in upholding a conviction and a sentence to the state penitentiary for the crime of grand larceny in the light of the testimony herein before reviewed. When a case is based on purely circumstantial evidence the proof must be sufficient not only to convince the jury beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused, but they must be so convinced to the exclusion of every other reasonable hypothesis consistent with his innocence. Obviously there are a number of other reasonable hypotheses as to what
Reversed, and appellant discharged.