Opinion
Opinion Filed December 11, 1925.
A Writ of Error to the Circuit Court of Okeechobee County; C. E. Chillingsworth, Judge.
Reversed.
C. D. Benson, J. C. Sullivan, Stafford Caldwell, T. W. Conely, Jr., and C. Bradford, for Plaintiff in Error;
Rivers Buford, Attorney General, and Marvin C. McIntosh, Assistant Attorney General, for Defendant in Error.
On July 4, 1924, an elaborate public celebration was held in Okeechobee City. At about the noon hour, and just preceding the serving of a barbecue dinner, several aeroplanes were flying in the air overhead, and a succession of explosions from firecrackers and other noise-making devices were recurring at frequent intervals at the scene of the celebration. Large numbers of people and many automobiles were moving about in the vicinity. One of the spectators at the celebration was standing by an automobile, engaged in casual conversation with a friend seated in the car, when the former fell to the ground dead, his head pierced by a steel bullet. The State produced in evidence a .32-calibre steel bullet found near the body immediately after the tragedy, which was claimed to be the bullet which killed the deceased, though it was never positively identified as such. The circumstances indicated that the fatal bullet may have been fired from the vicinity of several large automobile busses parked along the roadway about ninety feet distant. At the time, a number of persons were in the vicinity of, or passing by the busses. Plaintiff in error, hereafter referred to as the defendant, was found shortly after the homicide sitting in the driver's seat of one of the busses. He was arrested and charged with the homicide. When arrested, defendant was found in possession of a .32-calibre automatic pistol, the magazine of which was empty. Defendant admitted to the arresting officer that he had fired three shots from the pistol a short time before, but claimed that all of these shots had been fired into the ground, and none of them in the direction of the deceased.
Defendant was indicted for manslaughter, and after trial was adjudged guilty. This writ of error is taken to that judgment.
Although there were a number of people in the immediate vicinity of the homicide, no witness was produced who saw the fatal shot fired. Evidence upon that phase of the case is wholly circumstantial. There is no sufficient proof that the defendant fired more than three shots. The State's witness who seems to have been the most definite observer of events, testified that he saw the defendant fire all of those shots into the ground, none of them being "in the range" of the deceased. The same witness testified that before he saw the three shots fired — "some little bit before * * *, it might have been five or ten minutes, * * *," he heard one shot fired and that there was a similarity between the report of the first shot and the three shots which he later saw fired into the ground by the defendant, but the witness further testified, "I don't know who fired the (first) shot, I just heard it, or in what direction it was fired. I saw three shots after that." No other testimony connects the defendant with the first shot. The witness testified that he did not know whether the deceased was killed before the first shot or afterward.
Although absolute metaphysical and demonstrative certainty is not essential to sufficient proof by circumstances, nevertheless, in order to invest mere circumstances with the force and effect of lawful proof, these circumstances, taken together, must be of a conclusive nature and tendency, leading on the whole to a satisfactory conclusion of guilt, and must produce in effect a moral certainty that the accused, and no one else committed the offense, before a verdict of guilty is authorized. Under appropriate circumstances, a conviction may be sustained upon circumstantial evidence alone, McRae v. State, 62 Fla. 74, 57 South. Rep. 348; Williams v. State, 73 Fla. 1198; 75 South. Rep. 785; but it is not sufficient that the facts proven create a strong probability of guilt, or are consistent therewith. The facts must be inconsistent with innocence. The value of circumstantial evidence, and its effect as proof, depends upon the conclusive nature and tendency of the circumstances relied upon to establish the controverted fact. If any fact essential to a conviction is not legally established to a moral certainty, the evidence is inconclusive, and cannot be said to be sufficient in law to satisfy the mind and conscience of a jury. Kennedy v. State, 31 Fla. 428; 12 South. Rep. 858; Whetson v. State, 31 Fla. 240; 12 South. Rep. 661; Gantling v. State, 40 Fla. 237, 23 South. Rep. 857; Pate v. State, 72 Fla. 97; 72 South. Rep. 517; Asher v. State, ___ Fla. ___; 105 South. Rep. 140, decided at the June Term, 1925; Hall v. State, decided December 4th, 1925.
The evidence disclosed by this record is deficient in that it does not sufficiently identify the defendant as the person who fired the shot which killed the deceased. There is no direct evidence upon that point. The fact that defendant fired the fatal shot may be inferred only from other circumstances testified to, which although perhaps consistent with guilt, by no means exclude every other reasonable hypothesis.
Reversed for a new trial.
BROWN, C. J., AND WHITFIELD, ELLIS AND TERRELL, J. J., concur.
BUFORD, J., disqualified.