During the fall of 1913 the accused went to the home of J. A. Goodwin, near Ty Ty, Georgia, and carried with him a one-eyed bay mare, which he proposed to trade for an old horse be
In the ease of Rainey v. State, 94 Ga. 599 (19 S. E. 892), which involved a similar prosecution growing out of a horse trade, it appeared that the party who traded with the defendant thought he discovered something wrong in one of the mare’s legs and so told the defendant, who replied, “No, there is nothing the matter with her; it is the way she is standing;” and the defendant further said that the mare was “all right,” but she turned out afterwards to be weak-eyed and had a big leg. The witness further said that he did not know that the defendant knew at the time- that anything was wrong with the mare. A majority of the Supreme Court held that as the evidence showed that the defects in the mare traded by the accused to the prosecutor were patent, and were actually discovered by the latter before the trade was concluded, a conviction was not authorized. In Tatum v. State, 58 Ga. 409, the court said that “Knowingly to misrepresent a blind horse as sound (the horse’s eyes being apparently good), and thereby to cheat and defraud a person swapping for the animal, is to commit the offense of being a common cheat and swindler, under section of the Code
In another particular we conclude that the evidence was insufficient to authorize the verdict of guilty, since it does not appear, either from any direct proof or from proof of circumstances, that the defendant had any knowledge, at the time he represented to Goodwin that the mare was sound, that these representations were false and that the eye which he said was sound was in fact defective. It is true such knowledge may be shown by circumstances, including the opportunities which the accused had to ascertain the facts, but it must be established in some way before a conviction would
Judgment reversed.
