Opinion op the Court by
Judge Settle —Reversing.
Following his indictment for the offense of unlawfully having in his possession a still, designed for use in the unlavfful manufacture of spirituous liquors, the appellant, Henderson Stephens, was tried in the court helow, by verdict of a jury fonnct guilty of the offense charged, and his punishment fixed at a fine of $500.00 and confinement in jail for a period of six months. He complains of the verdict and judgment entered thereon; also of the refusal of the circuit court to grant him a new trial, and has appealed.
He seeks a reversal of the judgment on the grounds that error was committed hy the trial court: (1) In failing to properly instruct the jury as to the law of the case; (2) in overruling his motion for an instruction peremptorily directing his acquittal hy the jury.
The 'appellant particularly complains of the second parag’raph of instruction 1, given hy the trial court to the jury evidently intended to be explanatory of the first paragraph thereof, which, being aptly expressed in the approved language generally employed in the first instruiction of a criminal case, stood in no need of- such explanation. The second paragraph reads as follows:
“The jury are further instructed that while it is necessary in orcler to convict the defendant in this case for the Commonwealth to prove by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant in Boyd county, and within-the time indicated in this instruction, had in his possession, or under his control, and use, an illicit still, or *88apparatus, designed for the making of 'spirituous liquor, that it is not essential to such conviction to prove that he owned the still or apparatus, or made any liquor by said still, or apparatus, and you may convict him of the offense by proof of facts and circumstances, or circumstantial evidence proven in evidence if you shall believe beyond a reasonable doubt he is guilty of the offense charged in the indictment. ’ ’
It is not claimed by the ‘Commonwealth that the evidence upon which it relied for the conviction of the appellant was other than purely circumstantial; and while guilt may be established by circumstantial evidence, if if be sufficient to destroy every reasonable -hypothesis of innocence, we have repeatedly hel-d that the court should not give an. instruction defining the nature of circumstantial evidence or its value in a given state óf case even where there is evidence partly positive and partly circumstantial, but that it should be left to the jury to give it such weight as they may consider it entitled to. Smith v. Commonwealth, 140 Ky. 599; Stricklen v. Commonwealth, 7 R. 226; Brady v. Commonwealth, 11 Bush 285.
In Minniard v. Commonwealth, 158 Ky. 210, in discussing this question we, in part, said:
“It has, also, been held that circumstantial evidence, like direct or positive -evidence, should be left to the consideration and determination of the jury, without caution cr suggestion on the part of the -court a's to its value or the necessity of scrutinizing it closely.”
In each of the quite recent cases of Whitehead v. Commonwealth, 192 Ky. 428; Bullington v. Commonwealth, 193 Ky. 529, and Urban v. Commonwealth, 195 Ky. 704 (all appeals from the same court in which the judgment under review in the instant case was rendered), we strongly condemned an instruction containing substantially the same language found in the one we are here-considering. In view of the character of the so-called circumstantial evidence relied on by the Commonwealth to establish the guilt of -the appellant in this case, argument will not be necessary to demonstrate the prejudicial effect upon the appellant’s substantial rights of the instruction complained of. There can be no -escape from the conclusion that its effect upon the jury could alone have caused the return of a verdict wholly unsupported by proof. It appears from the testimony of the prohibition officer, his posse and, also, that of -the appellant’s witnesses, that the still, on account of which the appel*89lant was indicted, together with its equipment for manufacturing whiskey, was found in the woods about 400 yards in the rear of a small tract of land owned by a widow, Mrs. Henry Springer, who with her three sons occupies the residence thereon. The sons are about 10, 12 and 15 years of age, respectively. The still was not on the land of Mrs. Springer, but on that of another adjoining hers. The appellant is the son-in-law of Mrs. Springer, and until his removal to her home, only four days before the still was discovered, he had resided in other neighborhoods where he had worked for .several years as a miner of coal. His removal to Mrs. Springer’s followed the closing of the Hi Carbon coal mines where he had last worked. According to the testimony of all the Commonwealth’s'witnesses, the still appeared to have been in active operation at least two months before its discovery. It also appeared from the evidence that during that time, and down to within three or four days after the closing of the mine there, the appellant was at work at Hi Carbon, and there was no proof of his ever having been seen at or near the place of the location of the still,, or of his having been engaged in the manufacture of whiskey there or elsewhere, or in the bootlegging of intoxicating liquors.
There was evidence that there was some sort of a roadway leading from the rear of Mrs. Springer’s premises and a public road crossing same, to or in the direction of the still and that there was a partial opening in her post and wire fence separating her land from the adjoining land containing the still, and also some evidence that persons leaving the still'to reach the public road on the Springer land, or the public road to go to the still land, would have to travel the roadway first mentioned.
Manifestly there.was no fact or circumstance shown by any of the foregoing evidence that tended in the remotest degree to connect the appellant with the ownership or operation of the still, consequently he was clearly entitled to the directed verdict of acquittal as requested of the (trial court.
As said in the recent case of Johnson v. Commonwealth, 194 Ky. 568:
“All right thinking persons must concede the necessity of enforcing the law prohibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors, but such necessity cannot justify the conviction of those charged with the violation of such laws upon mere suspicion as was done in this *90case. The .guilt of 'the offender must be established by. evidence beyond a reasonable 'doubt, as in the case of other law violators. Guilt may be shown by circumstantial evidence sufficient to destroy every reasonable hypothesis of innocence, but it cannot be established upon mere suspicion or conjecture.” Binnion, etc. v. Commonwealth, 195 Ky. 217; Saylor v. Commonwealth, 158 Ky. 768; Express Co. v. Commonwealth, 168 Ky. 480.
Because of the 'error of the trial court in giving the second paragraph of instruction 1, and its refusal, at the conclusion of the evidence, to peremptorily instruct the jury to return a verdict of acquittal, the judgment is .reversed for a new trial not inconsistent with the opinion.