Wade v. State

84 S.E. 593, 16 Ga. App. 163, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 527
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 23, 1915
Docket6228
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 593 (Wade 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
Wade v. State, 84 S.E. 593, 16 Ga. App. 163, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 527 (Ga. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

Wade, J.

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 [164]*164front of the barn, though the entire structure, was then blazing all over. The plaintiff in error, Charlie Wade, a negro, worked for J. E. Felder, the owner’s husband, during the year 1913, but left'his employer a short time before Christmas of that year, after assuring Mr. Felder that he expected to remain with him; though there was no occasion for his giving this assurance, as he had permission to go if he wished to do so. He removed to a place belonging to Dr. Liggin, adjoining the Felder place, and only a short distance from the barn in question, and was living there when the fire occurred. A day or so before the burning he stated to a witness that John Felder, the son of the owner of the barn, had frightened his mule with an automobile and caused it to tear up his buggy, and if Mr. Felder did not pay for having the buggy repaired, he would make him (Felder) “lose ten times the worth of that buggy.” It appeared also that the buggy and some cotton were levied upon in behalf of Felder, and the defendant said in this connection that he would make Felder lose ten times the worth of the buggy; and it was shown by different witnesses that on another occasion he made threats to the effect that he would cause Mr. Felder to lose something. The defendant’s buggy was then on the side of the road, with two wheels broken down, and he said that his mule ran against a post and broke the buggy because it was frightened by a car driven by Mr. Felder’s son; and further that he had some cotton in town which Mr. Felder had attached, and if Mr. Felder did not pay for the buggy, he would make it cost him several times as much, though he did not say what he was going to do to accomplish this result. This was said a few days only before the barn was burned.

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 [165]*165that the person going from the barn was moving at a more rapid rate than when he approached it. Dogs followed the tracks leading from the barn to a point on a ditch in the direction of the house of the defendant. Here it appeared, from marks on the bank of this dry ditch, that the person wearing the badly worn shoes and making the tracks which the dogs had followed to this point had seated himself and changed his shoes for another pair, for the dogs refused to follow the tracks farther, and the only tracks leading off from this point, except the tracks going towards the barn and returning, led in the direction of and up to the house of the defendant and were made by other and different shoes. The last-mentioned tracks (which were clearly defined, as they crossed over soft plowed ground) were followed by the sheriff and his posse to the defendant’s house. The defendant was not at his house, but at the house of his employer, Dr. Liggin, where he was found eating breakfast. He then had on his feet a pair of shoes which were later-measured and compared with the tracks between the ditch and his house, and found to correspond exactly in every particular. He accompanied the sheriff from his house to the point on the ditch already referred to, and the tracks then made by him, as he walked along in the same direction and parallel with the line of tracks going from that point to his house, were identical in every particular with those leading to his house. At his house the posse discovered a pair of shoes which were badly worn and which, when pressed into the soft earth, made tracks identical in every minute particular with the tracks leading towards the barn from the direction of the defendant’s house and back from the barn towards the ditch and his house. These shoes when discovered were somewhat moist underneath, and damp sand was clinging to them, and there were some grass-seeds in them. There was testimony showing that the tracks from the barn to the ditch were made by the same shoes discovered in the defendant’s house a few hours after the burning, and that the tracks from the ditch to his house were made by the shoes that were on his feet at the time he was arrested by the sheriff, the morning following the commission of the crime. There was also testimony from several witnesses that he stated early in the morning when the fire occurred, and some hours thereafter, while discussing the burning with several other negroes on. the plantation where he lived, that it was Mr. Felder’s barn that was [166]*166burning, as he had been out in his yard between one and two o’clock that morning, and had seen the fire; though in his statement at the trial he said that he had not been out of his house the night of the fire, after he had gone to bed some hours before; and it appeared further that he was the first person on the plantation where he lived to discover the fire; that none of those there, by whom it was discussed, except the defendant, could determine what particular building on the place of Mr. Felder was burning; and that when requested by one Mr. Whiteside to saddle the horse and go over,to Mr. Felder’s place and ascertain whether it was his house or barn which had been destroyed, the defendant declined to go, and gave no reason for not going. When he. spoke to this witness about the fire he said: “Look over yonder, Mr. Felder’s barn is burning up.” The witness testified, that he noticed the fire that the defendant spoke about, but could not tell whether it was the barn or the residence of Mr. Felder; that he could see the house because it was between the witness and the barn, but could not determine by looking over it whether the barn or the house was burning. The shoes found in the defendant’s house, and which several witnesses testified made -tracks identical with the tracks leading away from the burned barn, were introduced in evidence, and the defendant did not deny the ownership thereof, but contented himself with asserting that he had not been on the place of Mr. Felder at all, and denying that he had any grudge against Mr. Felder, or that he had ever made threats against him. The tracks approaching the barn, as already stated, indicated, according to some testimony, that the person making the tracks approached stealthilyi; and the tracks leading away from the barn, made by the same pair of shoes, indicated that the person wearing them ran away from the barn, as the tracks were further apart, and, from their general appearance, were made, as asserted by several witnesses, by a person running.

The plaintiff in error insists that the corpus.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 593, 16 Ga. App. 163, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-state-gactapp-1915.