Court Opinion

ID: 5607144
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 03:47:12.21906+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:36:59.251416
License: Public Domain

Russell, C. J.
The plaintiffs in error were convicted of the offense of taking oysters from a private bed of one H. E. Coffin, on the west shore of Sapelo Island, in McIntosh county. The indictment alleged that the taking was unlawful and “with force and arms, without authority from the owner, H. E. Coffin.” Section 617 of the Penal Code declares that “If any person shall, without authority from the owner,' take or catch any oysters from any private bed . . , he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” No one will contend that if the owner of a private oyster-bed invited another, or gave permission to another, to gather oj’sters therefrom, the taking of oysters from it under such permission would be a violation of the law. It is therefore readily to be seen that the gist *575of the offense prescribed in the statute is the taking of oysters from private beds without the owner's consent, and it is not an offense to take them with the owner’s authority. In the case at bar the owner appears to. be a non-resident, but, according to the proof, he spends a considerable portion of his time in McIntosh county, on Sapelo Island, and he was on Sapelo Island at the time of the trial. An agent of the owner testified that he saw the defendants with a boat and several bateaux getting oysters from Mr. Coffin’s private bed, on the west shore of Sapelo Island, and that he arrested them. He testified that he was in charge of the island and of the private oyster-beds on the date named in the indictment (October 28,1913), and that he did not give the defendants, or any of them, authority to take the oysters. He did not state, however, that he had been in charge of the oyster-beds prior to the date when he saw the defendants getting the oysters, and he swore that he did not know that Mr. Coffin, the owner, had not given them authority or permission to take the oysters in question. On cross-examination he swore that “he [Mr. Coffin] may have done so.” It further appeared that Mr. Coffin came to Sapelo Island several times a year, was there at the time the witness was testifying, and had been there a few months before. The defendants made no statement.
The quotation from the code section upon which the indictment was 'based suffices to show the necessity for the State to prove that the taking of the oysters was without authority from the owner. It is essential for the commission of the crime that the taking be without authority, and the fact that the taking was without authority was to be proved by the State, as was any other allegation material as an element in the alleged offense. To make out a prima facie case of guilt it was necessary for the State to show affirmatively that the owner had not given the defendants authority to take the oysters in question. Of course, where a proviso in a criminal statute prevents its penal application under particular facts or certain conditions, the proviso is defensive in its nature, and the existence of the defensive facts or conditions must be established by the defendant, but, under the indictment here involved, the gist of the offense is the removal without the owner’s authority. It is insisted by State’s counsel that the want of consent, or absence of authority from the owner, pray be proved by testimony other than that of the owner himself, and it is urged *576that the statute did not contemplate that there could be no conviction if it should occur that the owner, who had left the property in the charge of another, was absent and could not testify to his non-consent. We can imagine cases where such an agency could be conferred by the owner as to include exclusive and irrevocable authority to grant or withhold consent to the taking of ojrsters from an oyster-bed, or • such exclusive power could be granted with reference thereto as would render the testimony of an agent, that he himself did not consent, proof that the owner did not authorize the taking of any oysters. However, such is not the present case. Nothing more appears from the record than that Mr. Strickland is Mr. Coffin’s agent in charge of his oyster-beds. There is no evidence that he is in exclusive charge. There is evidence that Mr; Coffin is frequently at Sapelo Island; that the defendants lived near by; 'and it is as reasonable to suppose that Mr. Coffin knows them, and that he gave them authority to get the oysters in question, as that they were getting the oysters without authority and in violation of the law. The fact that the owner is a non-resident no more relieves him from the duty of testifying as a witness than if he were a resident of the State. Every defendant is presumed to be innocent until his guilt is established to the satisfaction of the jury beyond 'any reasonable doubt. And when an act is subject to two constructions, — one consistent with innocence, and the other merely indicative of guilt, — it is well settled that the theory which points to innocence is to be adopted rather than that which points to guilt. Hnder this well-settled rule, it can not be held that the evidence of an agent (whose principal was at the very time within the jurisdiction of the court), to the effect that he did not know whether the owner had given authority or not, is sufficient to so overcome the general presumption of innocence as to establish the essential averment that the owner had not authorized the oysters to be taken.

Judgment reversed.