There is a painful conflict between what we would do as men and what we must do as magistrates. No doubt can exist that a crime was committed, and that the guilty person ought to be punished. The sole uncertainty relates to the identity of the offender. There was evidence tending to establish an alibi, and if this evidence was true, the little girl was probably mistaken in identifying the accused as the person who assaulted her. The record discloses some conflict between herself and her mother as to whether the mother did or did not make a certain remark to her, calculated to shape and > influence her testimony at the trial. If the mother did this, the reliability and value of the child’s evidence would naturally be considerably impaired. The mother testified she did not make the remark, and the child testified she did make it. As the child, if truthful, must have believed she made it, this belief ought, perhaps,. to count for as much against the general weight of the child’s evidence as would the remark itself were there no difference between the witnesses concerning it. Taking all the evidence together, we feel, as men, grave apprehension of mistake on the part of the little girl in *160this matter of identity. But the question 'was one'' exclusively for the jury, and their finding having been approved by the presiding judge, we cannot, as a reviewing court, allow any mere doubts of our own to supersede the verdict. The law, as we understand it, constrains us to recognize the verdict as having solved rightly against the accused all reasonable doubt as to matters of fact involved in his guilt or innocence. There was no error in denying a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.