42 Tenn. 219 | Tenn. | 1865
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The prisoner, John Younkins, a free man of color,
It further appears that the prisoner told a colored woman, who was examined as a witness against him, that he wanted to borrow a bag to get some turnips in, and asked her to go with him; and on the way, he said he had a hog over the hill, and that he would give her a piece of it. She declined going further, and returned. *
It cannot be denied, that the facts and circumstances of this case, produce a strong suspicion of the guilt of the accused; but without first proving the corpus delicti— that is, that the hog had been stolen — they are not of themselves, sufficient to justify the conviction of the prisoner, of a felony. The case of Tyree vs. The State, 5 Hum., 383, presents a stronger case than the one before the Court; and it was held in that case, that the evidence establishing the corpus delicti, was too slight to sustain a verdict of conviction.
The alleged confessions of the prisoner, are entitled to but little consideration. He was under arrest at the time, and surrounded by a strong guard; had been chased and shot at, and, at most, only made such statements as tended to implicate him in the crimes of which he was accused. He 'did not admit the crime, Or say anything, except inferentially, which coupled him with it.
In like manner, the statements of the prisoner to the colored woman, in the absence of proof of the corpus delicti, are too vague, uncertain, and unsatisfactory, to predicate a conviction upon. Suspicious as they may be, they are not inconsistent with the prisoner’s innocence, and, in our opinion; insufficient to es
The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial awarded.