114 Ga. 844 | Ga. | 1902
Porter Woodson was tried in the county court of Newton county, before the judge of said court without the intervention of a jury, upon an accusation made by B. L. Loyd, tax-collector of the county, charging him with having committed a misdemeanor.
Granting that there is a license required by law of one who solicits or procures emigrants, or attempts to do so, before a conviction under the Penal Code, § 601, could be sustained, it would be necessary for the evidence to show that the accused did solicit or procure emigrants or attempt to do so. In Varner v. State, 110 Ga. 595, the plaintiff in error had been convicted in the court below of a violation of tbis section of the Penal Code, upon proof showing that he “had made an 'arrangement with two persons, under which they were to go to the State of Florida and there to be employed in cutting turpentine boxes;” and “that the purpose of each of these persons was to go to the State of Florida to work, and that neither had any present intention of taking up his residence there.” This court held that, as an emigrant is “ one who quits his country for any lawful reason, with a design to settle elsewere, and takes his family and property with him,” the conviction could not be sustained, as the evidence failed to show that the persons whom the accused procured to go from this State to the State of Florida were emigrants. There iis not a particle of evidence in the present case, that the accused, or even Williams, whose agent or employee he was, solicited or procured any one to go from this State for the purpose of making his domicile in another State, or attempted to do so. It is, therefore, clear that the conviction can not be sustained under the Penal Code, § 601.
Judgment reversed.