Rogers v. State

56 S.E.2d 633, 80 Ga. App. 585, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 884
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 18, 1949
Docket32610.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 56 S.E.2d 633 (Rogers v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. State, 56 S.E.2d 633, 80 Ga. App. 585, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 884 (Ga. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

MacIntyre, P. J.

The defendant, L. C. Rogers, was indicted in the Superior Court of Murray County for the larceny of 300 pounds of D. P. & L. cotton, the property of J. C. Smith and of the value of $45. The defendant was tried, convicted, and sentenced. His motion for. a new trial was overruled, and he excepted. The jury was authorized to find: The prosecutor, J. C. *586 Smith, had had some cotton stolen from him on the night of October 7, or during the early morning of October 8, before 7 o’clock, at which time he discovered his loss; that the cotton had been picked on the 7th and had been left in the field in loose form. Prior to the loss of the cotton and within twenty-four hours of the time the cotton was stolen, it had rained in the vicinity of the field from which the cotton was stolen. The tracks of two men led from the place where the prosecutor had left the cotton in the field to a piece of woodland on the side of the public dirt road which skirted the cotton field. The sheriff and a State highway patrolman investigating the matter discovered a place where a car had turned out of the public dirt road into the woodland, and at this point they discovered that one of the tires of the car which had turned out of the road into the woodland made a peculiar track, as though a groove had been cut entirely around the tire. In the soft dirt where the car had turned out of the road, this car tire had left a ridge-like impression that was peculiar and distinctive. The tracks leading from the point where the cotton had been stolen led to the point where the car with the peculiar tire mark had been parked, and the investigator's found loose cotton scattered about on the ground at that point. In searching for the car that made this peculiar tire mark, the investigators followed the tracks of the car to where the car had turned out of the road into the yard of a Mr. Tatum. Tatum informed them that the tracks had been made by the automobile in which the defendant Rogers and one Granville Smith had been riding when they came to his house to discuss purchasing an automobile which he had for sale. From the Tatum house the investigators went to the defendant’s house and found the defendant’s car, and upon examination of the tires discovered the tire which made the peculiar and distinctive track and which fitted a plaster of Paris cast (which the State patrolman had made of the track at a point in the public road where the car that made the peculiar track “came back into the road up there where the cotton was stolen”), (He testified: “When this tire came back into the road up there was soft ground there, and it made an imprint of the tire—I mixed up the plaster of Paris in a thin solution and poured it in the tracks, and when it sat up and got dry, we picked it up *587 and there is the imprint. You will notice that this groove is over here to one side—it is not on the center, and it is the same tire that made the tracks. I got that tire off of L. C. Rogers’ car. I made that cast where the cotton was stolen, from where the car was parked.”) (Both the cast and the tire were introduced in evidence for the jury’s examination.) The jury was further authorized to find that Rogers was present at the time of the examination of the tires at his home by the investigators. The investigators did not have a warrant for the arrest of Rogers, and the sheriff went back to town to obtain one, but when he returned Rogers was absent and could not be found, although the sheriff searched for him off and on for almost a month, and he was never arrested until some thirty days after the cotton was stolen, when he, in company with his attorney, surrendered to the sheriff and was released on bond after a commitment heáring. At the time he disappeared he had not been informed of his impending arrest or of the theft of the cotton. Locks of cotton were found in the back of the defendant’s car and in the “turtle shell” of the car when the officers took charge of it; the cotton in the car was of the D. P. & L. variety grown by the prosecutor. The cotton stolen from the prosecutor had been grown on red-clay land and bore some red-clay stains, and if dragged across the field would have been stained with red clay even more. The next day after the cotton was stolen, some D. P. & L. cotton bearing red-clay stains was found in a wagon back of the home of Granville Smith (Granville Smith was the man who had driven with the defendant to the Tatum house on the day before the cotton was stolen). The land upon which the defendant lived and upon which Granville Smith lived was not red-clay land, but “slatey gray” land.

It seems to us that, while no one of the circumstances here would have been sufficient, to prove the guilt of the defendant, yet all of them taken together authorized the jury to infer that the defendant was guilty as charged. The cotton found in the defendant’s car was of the same variety as that lost by the prosecutor, and on the day before the cotton was stolen the defendant and Granville Smith had been in the vicinity of the field from which the cotton was stolen when they had driven to Tatum’s house. There were, judging from the two sets of tracks *588 in the cotton field, two persons who participated in the theft of the cotton; the cotton found at Granville Smith’s was of the variety lost by the prosecutor, and bore red-clay stains as did the prosecutor’s cotton. . The defendant had fled following the examination of the tires on his car, although nothing was said to him concerning the theft of the cotton and his impending arrest, and he could not be located for a period of about a month or until he surrendered in company with his attorney; several witnesses testified that the loose cotton was in the back of the defendant’s car; some testified simply that it was loose cotton; others testified that it was of the D. P. & L. variety grown by the prosecutor. The defendant in his statement to the jury made no reference to any cotton in the back of his car; and while it is true that his statement could have been construed as a general denial of guilt, and he might have considered this denial sufficient without denying or explaining the-presence of this or any other cotton in his car, if any, the jury might also have taken into consideration in arriving at its verdict this failure by the defendant to explain or expressly deny that any cotton was in his car. From these circumstances,- we think that the jury was authorized to find the defendant guilty of the theft of the cotton.

The court charged the jury on the subject of flight. The correctness of the charge as a rule of evidence is not challenged, but its applicability in the case is denied. The defendant contended that no evidence adduced upon the trial authorized the charge on this subject. The sheriff testified: that he found that one of the tires on the car in the defendant’s yard had made the peculiarly characteristic track found at the scene of the theft; that the defendant was at his home during the investigators’ examination of the tires on the defendant’s car; that, since he had no warrant for the defendant’s arrest, he returned to town to obtain the warrant, but upon his return the defendant could not be found at his home and, though he sought to locate him on many occasions, he never did; and that the defendant was never found until some thirty days later, when he surrendered in company with his attorney. This was sufficient evidence of flight to authorize the charge on that subject.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 S.E.2d 633, 80 Ga. App. 585, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-state-gactapp-1949.