Lead Opinion
About two o’clock in the morning of January 9, 1914, a barn in which were 7 mules and 2 horses, besides hay and fodder, on the place of Mrs. J. E. Felder, about 200 yards from her dwelling-house, was destroyed by fire, together with the live stock and other contents thereof. There had been no fire about the barn during the day preceding the burning, and the fire broke 'out long after any one had legitimate occasion to be in or around the barn. The evidence showed also that no gasoline, oil, or like combustible materials were stored in the barn, and when the fire was observed by the owner’s husband, it appeared to him to have started in
Early the next day after the fire, the sheriff was sent for and came with dogs belonging to the county. Fresh tracks were discovered, leading up to the barn, and going away from it in the direction of the house where the defendant lived. These tracks were made by a pair of worn-out shoes which were “worn all around the counters, and where one of the shoes made a track, the leather would catch on the ground, and one of the shoes had no sole much on it.” The tracks were discovered where hogs had been rooting in a sweet-potato patch, and the ground was soft and moist, "and the tracks were quite distinct. The tracks; leading towards the barn were closer together than those leading away, and indicated
The plaintiff in error insists that the corpus. delicti is not sufficiently shown by the circumstances in evidence to exclude every reasonable hypothesis other than that the barn was feloniously burned. He insists also that, even if it be conceded that the burning was felonious, the evidence for the State is not sufficient to connect him with the crime to the exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis to the contrary. It is well recognized that where nothing
In the case of Green v. State, 111 Ga. 139 (36 S. E. 609), relied upon by the plaintiff in error, the tracks discovered about the burned building were not compared with the tracks known to have been made by the defendant, except that one witness testified that she had noticed the tracks of the defendant while he worked at a certain place, and that she had looked at his tracks made in some sand, which corresponded “to the best of her knowledge, with the tracks discovered near the scene of the burning.” The tracks were followed from the barn in that case only to a point within a mile of the place where the defendant lived. The court very properly held that the evidence, which was entirely circumstantial, in no way connected the accused with the arson and did not exclude every other reasonable hypothesis than that of his guilt. Also, there was no sufficient motive shown in that case. In the case of Cummings v. State, 110 Ga. 293 (45 S. E. 973), which the plaintiff in error likewise relies upon, the Supreme Court said: “Though the State’s evidence very strongly and conclusively tended to establish the fact that tracks seen near the place of the crime, and which must have been made on the night it was committed, corresponded in minute.particulars with shoes belonging to the accused, this, without more, was not sufficient to show, to the exclusion of every other reasonable hypothesis, that he committed the crime.” It will be observed, however, that in that e^se, while the tracks seen near the place of the crime, and which must have been made on the night it was committed, corresponded in minute particulars to shoes belonging to the accused, there was nothing more to show, to the exclusion of every other reasonable hypothesis, that the defendant committed the crime. In the case under consideration the tracks approaching the barn led from the direction of the defendant’s house, and the tracks leaving the barn led towards his house. The
In the Gaither case, 119 Ga. 118 (45 S. E. 973), the court said: “It does not appear that the tracks or the dogs went to any particular place in the yard, or that any further use was made of the dogs. The dogs did not go near the accused or to his house. . There was no evidence as to the motive for the alleged crime.” It further appeared that the accused stated to a witness, after the fire occurred, that he had stayed at a certain plantation in the neighborhood, after having spent the day at other places mentioned, and stayed there all night with a certain woman in a house in the yard, and there was no contradiction as to this, but to the contrary a witness testified: “We investigated the matter, and were told that he did spend the night there.” Referring to evidence as to footprints at or near the scene of a crime, this court, in Lindsey v. State, 9 Ga. App. 299 (70 S. E. 1114), said: “This character of circumstantial evidence . . is not usually sufficient to authorize a conviction, unless there is some peculiarity in the tracks . to clearly identify them as the tracks of the accused.” Here it appeared that the person who left the scene of the crime about the time the fire was discovered made a track which had several un
The testimony in behalf of the State sufficiently established the corpus delicti, and sufficiently connected the defendant with the commission of the crime to authorize the verdict returned by the jury. ' Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. In my judgment the apprehension that a possibly guilty man may escape unduly constrains my colleagues to affirm the judgment in the present case. Eor myself, I am compelled to say that I see no proof whatever of the corpus delicti. Presumably every burning is accidental or providential, where the contrary does not appear. The burden rests upon the State to satisfy the jury beyond any reasonable doubt that the building alleged to have been burned was feloniously fired, with the intent to destroy the building to the injury of its owner; and where circumstantial evidence alone is relied upon, the degree of proof necessary for the purpose must be such as to remove every other reasonable supposition than that the building was purposely fired by the accused. Even if there had been direct proof that the defendant had during the night passed by the barn, or even if he had been seen to run from it, I do not think that this, without more, would have authorized the inference that he set fire to it, if it burned later in the night. The fact that tracks alone, even if distinctly identified, are insufficient of themselves to authorize conviction is almost universally recognized. So far as the present case is concerned, the mere circumstance that tracks similar to these made by two pairs of shoes (admittedly in the possession of the defendant) were found near the barn does not afford sufficient
