105 Ga. 188 | Ga. | 1898
Owen Wimberly, with others, was jointly indicted for the offense of arson, and, upon a separate trial, he was
It is hot now an open question in this State that a conviction may be sustained upon a free and voluntary confession of guilt which has been corroborated by clear and positive proof of the corpus delicti, though there be no other corroboration. It has been too often ruled to be now gainsaid, that such proof of the corpus delicti may be considered as a circumstance sufficiently corroborating a confession. This principle has been ruled in Holsenbake v. State, 45 Ga. 43; Daniel v. State, 63 Ga. 339; Paul v. State, 65 Ga. 152; Williams v. State, 69 Ga. 14; Schaefer v. State, 93 Ga. 177. The charge complained of, therefore, stated a proposition of law which this court has many times sustained as correct. Following the decisions rendered in the cases above cited, and others -to the same effect, the doctrine tha.t proof of the corpus delicti may, in a legal sense, be sufficient corroboration of a confession to authorize a conviction is established. Properly understood, the charge first referred to amounts to no more than an abstract statement of this doctrine. But it was urgently insisted in the argument here, that it in effect instructed the jury that proof of the corpus delicti was sufficient corroboration of the confession to require a conviction. Even if this charge, taken alone' and without explanation, was susceptible of this construction, the same, when considered in connection with the other portions of the charge above quoted, could
Judgment affirmed.