1. The charge set out in the first head-note, of which complaint was made in the motion for a new trial, was undoubtedly erroneous for two reasons. First, the court ought not to have said that the accused had attempted to set up an alibi. The use of the word “ attempted ” at least had a tendency to convey to the minds of the jury an intimation that the effort of the accused to prove an alibi amounted to nothing more than an attempt. Secondly, the error already noticed was intensified when the court went on to instruct the jury that the burden of proof was upon the accused to satisfy them beyond a reasonable doubt that the alibi was true. We do not understand this to be the law. To make an alibi available as a defence, it must be proved, of course, but if the proof offered for this purpose is sufficient to satisfy the jury with reasonable certainty that the accused was not present when the crime was committed, no more should be required.
In Harrison v. The State, 83 Ga. 130, we find in the third head-note, which was made by Chief Justice Bleck
In Westbrook v. The State, 91 Ga. 11, 16 S. E. Rep. 100, it was held that when the accused set up an alibi as a defence, the burden of proving it was upon him, but there is no intimation in the ruling made in that case that he must prove it beyond a reasonable doubt.
It is true that in the present case, our learned brother of the circuit bench undertook to give in charge to the jury the second rule stated in the above quoted extract from the case of Harrison. His language was: “ Take the testimony, gentlemen, that the defendant has offered in support of his alibi, and see whether or not he has satisfied you that he could not have been there at the time and place that the crime -was committed, if a crime has been committed. If you should find that to be a fact, you would go no further, but you would return a verdict for the defendant. But if you should not believe that the alibi has been clearly established, you can take the testimony that was given in support of the alibi and consider it along with the other testimony in arriving at the truth in the case. You can consider it together with all the other testimony in the case, to see whether or not the testimony in support of the alibi, together with the testimony given' on the other branch of
2. The evidence for the State, if true, showed beyond all question that an assault was committed on the person of Mrs. Albright by some one who entered her room, and that the intent of the person making the assault was to commit the crime of rapé. The court, in several different portions of the charge, instructed the jury, in substance, that if the accused entered the room for the purpose of having carnal knowledge of the female therein, forcibly and against her will, they would be authorized to find him guilty. It may be that merely entering a room in which there is a female, for the purpose of committing a rape upon her, would be insufficient, without more, to authorize a conviction for an assault with intent to rape ; but the charge just mentioned, construed in connection with the evidence, was not, in this particular case, erroneous, because if the accused was the person who entered Mrs. Albright’s room, the
3. We presume, though the record does not distinctly so disclose, that the charge set out in the third head-note was invoked because of some criticism upon the husband of Mrs. Albright for not killing or offering violence to the accused upon meeting him on the morning after the alleged felonious assault upon Mrs. Albright. In the absence of some such reason, the court would have had no occasion to use the language complained of. We will assume that a proper reason arose for giving this charge, and we commend both its language and its spirit. If persons against whom criminal wrongs have been committed would desist from attempting to redress those wrongs by taking- the law into their own hands, and would appeal to the courts for protection, there would be less 5f lynch law, the prevalence of which throughout the land is so deplorable. We, therefore, in the most emphatic terms, uphold and sanction the charge of his honor. It is not only free from error, hut in every sense admirable and proper.
4. Counsel for the accused presented to the court a lengthy and argumentative request to charge the jury, summing up various facts and circumstances favorable to the theory of his innocence. The substance of this request appears in the reporter’s statement. There was no error, we think, in refusing to give it in charge to the jury. While it might properly form a portion of the argument of counsel, and contains many reasons and suggestions which might1 have weight with the jury, it would be going outside of the proper limits for the judge to use such language in instructing the jury upon the law of the case.
5. The motion for a new trial raised other questions