That a murder was committed is most certain. Every circumstance attending the dreadful affair appears with fullness, and the only question left in doubt was the one of paramount importance, — who did the killing?
1. It appeared that the main witness for. the State, together with Ms son and the son of a neighbor, went “possum hunting,” car*232rying a lantern; that their dogs had “ treed a possum; ” that they had just cut down the tree, the “ possum had been caught up, ” and at that moment two or three men appeared on an embankment or cliff some fifty or seventy-five yards aw^y, when one of them inquired whether Mann (the defendant) was there. The witness-twice inquired of Cuzzort, one of the hunting party, what the voice said, answered “ no ” to the question, went ten steps toward the group who were standing on the cliff, was met hy a volley of' oaths, ordered to retire, and, on turning to leave, two, three, or five shots were fired, one of which killed the son of the neighbor.. It appeared that'this witness, on the next day at the coroner’s inquest, stated that he thought he recognized the voice as Patton’s, and, while he at one time intimated that he could see the outliue of a form which was about like that of Patton, placed the identification solely on the voice, swore that he saw a Winchester riñe in Patton’s hand, and shotguns in the hands of the other-two. There was testimony that near the place at which the shooting occurred were found several empty shells which fitted the Winchester rifle owned by the defendant; that the next day, after the rifle, however, had been handled by several parties, the chamber was short of being full, about the number of shells found on the ground. It is conceded that there were several persons in the party by whom this shot was fired. Even if Patton had been in the crowd, it did not necessarily follow that he had fired the shot, or that it had been fired in' pursuit of a conspiracy, or that- he was a guilty participant in the act of the other party. The mere-finding of the shells which would fit the Winchester rifle would 'not necessarily connect him with the offense; or even if it was-shown that the shells had come from Patton’s rifle, the shot might have been fired by some one else. It did not appear that there were no other Winchester rifles in the neighborhood, nor that other persons did not use cartridges of the same make, size, and number. This was a circumstance which would have gone very far to confirm the defendant’s guilt if there had been other sufficient evidence to connect him with the killing ; but by itself the mere- finding of empty shells which will fit a particular pistol or rifle proves nothing, because the shells might fit half a dozen rifles in a neighborhood. It would have been as proper on that evidence to indict the owner of one rifle as another.
*233The witness must have referred to his mental state at the time of the killing much of that to which he subsequently swore, because he says that he recognized that the man had a Winchester-rifle, and that the other two had shotguns. Confessedly it was impossible for him to have decided whether the gun was a rifle, or, if a rifle, that it was a Winchester. So, too, the testimony that one of the men had on a dirty shirt is not calculated to confirm other parts of his testimony. By a process of exclusion these recognitions of the shirt and the gun are eliminated as being impossible; the size of the man and shells proves nothing, because too many men are of the same size as Patton, and too many guns could use this size shell. The case, therefore, finally turns solely upon the question as to whether the witness could recognize Patton from his voice. He was in the swamp; the moon was shining, but it was dark enough to require a lantern; the tree had just been cut down, and the dogs were barking; the voice from the hillside inquired, “ Is Mann (Patton) there?” Had the witness'then recognized the voice-as that of Patton, he must have been impressed with the folly of Patton on the hillside asking if Patton was in the swamp; and a natural answer would have communicated some such surprise. So far from then recognizing the voice, he testified that he three times asked Cuzzort, “What did he say ?” If he could not recognize the words of a stranger, how could he identify the infinitely more delicate tones of a voice he had only heard twice, and never at that pitch ? Where-the witness is acquainted with the accused, he may be in a position, to testify positively to his voice and thus identify -the defendant. But where, as here, it appears that there was nothing peculiar in the voice; when the witness was not acquainted with the defendant, and had only heard him speak twice, and that at a considerable period before the homicide; when he had never heard Patton halloa, the circumstances ought to be most propitious to entitle such' evidence to any weight. But it is said that there, was some evidence, and that the jury having passed on the issue, this court can not review their finding, nor undo what they have done by their verdict of guilty. If there were a conflict in the evidence, we certainly could not interfere. If there is a total want of evidence, we must interfere. Between a total want of evidence and a conflict of evidence there is the debatable ground as to the sufficiency of evidence. The court must determine in each case whether in its *234inherent character the evidence is sufficient to show beyond a reasonable .doubt that the defendant committed the crime charged.
2 — 8. The code recognizes different degrees of evidence, and as to some transactions'it provides that there must not only be evidence of the fact, but that such evidence must measure up to a particular standard. The evidence of one witness is not sufficient to convict of perjury. Confessions are evidence, but they are not sufficient unless corroborated. The testimony of an accomplice is evidence, but it is not sufficient unless corroborated. Evidence which leaves a doubt may be sufficient in a civil case; but evidence which tends to show the guilt of the defendant, while evidence, is not sufficient unless it establishes the guilt of the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt. Civil Code, §§ 5144, 5197; Penal Code, § 987. It will not do, therefore, to say that, because there is evidence of the guilt of the defendant, the court can not examine further after verdict. So to hold would be to admit that a verdict sustained by any evidence was right, even though in its character and probative value it did not measure up to the requirement of the law. This court has always recognized that the greatest weight and consideration should be paid to the verdicts of juries, and in many cases has held that while the verdicc was different from what the judges would have rendered as men, the court would not interfere. So, too, where the evidence was conflicting, it would not disturb the finding, although it might think that the preponderance was in favor of the losing party. In testing the sufficiency of evidence this court can not consider the credibility of witnesses, that being a matter exclusively for the jury, who note their manner of testilying, and consider the thousand and one things transpiring during a trial, which can not be photographed or transcribed and transmitted to this court as a part of the record. But while it can not consider the credibility of a witness, it must consider the nature and character of his testimony, whether it is in accord with natural laws, or is improbable, incredible, or seeks to establish facts which are impossible, or which, if not impossible, must in their very nature be uncertain, vague, indefinite, and insufficient to remove reasonable doubts. Juries act in accordance with this same principle, and often find verdicts contrary to the direct testimony of a witness, because their experience demonstrates that what the witness said could not have been true. What to our fathers was impossible *235is to us matter of course; and while the circle of the possible daily enlarges, yet some things are unchanged and unchangeable. The .great physical laws of the universe are witnesses in every case, and can not be impeached by the feeble voice of man, even though he be speaking under the sanction of an oath. A conviction could not be sustained by testimony that water of itself ran up hill, or that a distant object was recognized in the pitch dark, or that a witness recognized the voice of a man whom he had never heard speak, or that at night and in the woods he could tell that one seventy-five yards away had on a dirty shirt, or that he could'distinguish whether the rifle was a Winchester or a Martini.
We are far from asserting that slight facts may not point to still greater, and may not be welded into a chain of the strongest evidence. The ingenuity of the human mind nowhere manifests itself more frequently than in drawing correct conclusions from slight circumstances. Many a man has been convicted of á crime on proof of the identity of tracks; but foot-tracks alone would never be sufficient. Cummings v. State, 110 Ga. 293; McDaniel v. State, 53 Ga. 253; Shannon v. State, 57 Ga. 482; Ware v. State, 96 Ga. 349. It must be shown, not only that the foot of the accused fitted into the track, but that there was something peculiar about it, which distinguished it from those of other people. Too many people wear shoes of the same size to let mere proof that the accused’s shoes fitted the track convict him. It might be that there was nothing peculiar about the track, but that defect in the testimony might be. supplied by proof that no one except the defendant, wearing that sort of shoe, had been or could have been in the neighborhood. And .likewise an accused might be identified by his voice. This case having been reargued, and the record read several times most carefully, we have examined also to see what other courts have done in like cases, and in our search we have found a number of cases in which it has been explicitly ruled that such means of identification might be sufficient. In one it appeared that the witness thus identifying knew the defendant for nine years. Andrews v. Commonwealth (Va.), 40 S. E. 935. In Givens v. State, 35 Tex. Cr. 563, the witness had known the accused “for years.” In Com. v. Hayes, 138 Mass. 185, the witness had only heard the accused speak once, immediately before the crime, but testified that “the voice was coarse. *236rough., and very ugly.” In Com. v. Williams, 106 Mass. 63, the witness testified that the voice of the accused was very pleasant. There the court refused to charge that “identification by voice alone, of a person whose voice had been heard by witnesses but once, was insufficient and too uncertain, there being no other peculiarity.” While refusing this request, the court charged, and we think correctly, that the voice was a circumstance to be considered with other circumstances of the case. Acting under the practice which obtains in those jurisdictions where the court can express his opinion on the ,evidence, the trial judge in that case advised the jury that they ought not to convict the defendant on this circumstance alone, if no other circumstances tended to satisfy them that the defendant was the man. .
The tones of a voice are so intangible that ordinarily it can not be described. To say that it was the voice of Patton is almost an ipse dixit as to which no issue could be joined, unless there was something extraordinary or peculiar about it. Identification by the voice is in the nature of opinion evidence. That the witness heard some one speak, and understood what he said, is a fact; but where the speaker was not otherwise recognized, it is necessarily a matter of opinion as to who spoke. Here Bomar and Cuzzort both heard the same voice.' One says he does not know whose it was, and the other “ thinks it was Patton’s.” Being opinion evidence, it has no value unless the witness can give a sufficient reason for the ground of that opinion. None was given on the direct examination, and on the cross-examination the witness testified that he had no acquaintance with Patton, had talked with him for a few minutes several months before, and had also overheard him speak to a neighbor on the road. This cross.-examination, therefore, we think, showed that his opinion was entitled to only the slightest consideration. We do not mean to say that a man can be expected to tell how he recognizes a face, or how he identifies a voice, or how he knows a particular fact. The very wisest might find it difficult to explain the processes of the human mind or to tell how he knows anything. He can testify, however, as to facts, show an opportunity to know, and show that he has heen where the mind could receive the impression and acquire the knowledge. He could show that he has so often heard the tones of a voice that, though unable to describe, he was still able to recognize its pecu*237liarities or to identify it as belonging to a particular man. Here the witness not only fails to show how he identified the voice, but testifies to facts which would show that in the nature of things he could not be able to have known that voice with sufficient certainty to identify Patton beyond a reasonable doubt. The witness did not mention that Patton was the man until the next day. He does testify, “ After the killing the first one I reported it too was Hum Wood,” but he did not then say Patton was the slayer; and Cuzzort, in reply to the question, “ Mr. Bomar didn’t say anything at all that night about who he thought it was ? ” answered, “ No, sir. ” Considering the distance by which the parties were separated, the excitement and confusion, the fact that Bomar, the witness, had never known Patton except most casually, had only met him once for a few minutes and overheard remarks in a conversation with a neighbor, and had never heard Patton speak in a voice like that used at the time of the homicide, we are constrained to hold that.the evidence lacks that element which is sufficient to rebut the presumption of innocence, or to show that the defendant was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. As to this court’s duty to reverse where evidence leaves a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the defendant, see the following cases: Silvey v. State, 111 Ga. 849; Ballard v. State, 99 Ga. 195 ; Wells v. State, 97 Ga., 210 (4); King v. State, 84 Ga. 524; Cummings v. State, 110 Ga. 293 ; Johnson v. State, 61 Ga. 305 (4); McDaniel v. State, 53 Ga. 253 ; Shannon v. State, 57 Ga. 482; Laws v. State, 114 Ga. 10 ; Johnson v. State, 73 Ga. 107.
9, 10. The deceased was a young boy. The circumstances of the killing were so wanting in every mitigating circumstance, there was such an absence of motive, such a malicious deliberation in the shooting, that it must have appealed profoundly to the heated temper of the community in which the family of the young boy lived. There was nothing needed to arouse the sympathy or to excite the indignation of those conducting the trial; but, during the argument for the State, the shirt of the young boy who had been killed was handed to his mother, and she was requested to take it and show to the jury where the bullets went through, and where the blood had stained the garment. The scene was far more dramatic than when Antony held the garment of Csesar before the Roman crowd, and with studied eloquence said, “See what a rent the envious *238Casca made. ” Here it was no Antony, but the mother who pointed out the rents and blood-stains; and, bathed as she was in tears and sobbing out her grief before the jury, their indignation must have been kindled to fever heat. And we doubt not that the verdict was greatly influenced by this transaction; and had a motion for a mistrial been made at the time, the court would no doubt have granted it. Nothing in the code has in any way lessened the power of the trial judge to see that cases are conducted in an orderly manner. The constitution guarantees to every defendant a fair and impartial trial. Every litigant is entitled to the same right, and he does not get it where any influence except the law and the evidence is allowed to affect the minds of the jury. Hisses, cheers, demonstrations, improper appeals, argument not warranted by the evidence, and the like, all constitute an impairment of the right to a fair trial. When such things happen, counsel for the injured party is necessarily in a dilemma. Shall he let the trial proceed ? The jury may not have been enough influenced by the occurrence to render an adverse verdict; there is at least a chance of success. Shall he ask of the jury to retire, and move for a mistrial? The motion may not be granted, and he feels that the jury would know what he had done in their absence, and to the injury already done might be added whatever unfortunate result might be produced upon their minds by an unsuccessful motion, the making of which they might impute to conscious weakness, rather than to a sole desire to remove the impression produced by the improper conduct. Or shall he press for his mistrial ? The remedy is often worse than the disease. The defendant may be in jail. Great time and expense may have been incurred in securing the witnesses; yet he may be still willing to insist on the motion, and it may be granted, with the result that there must be a new trial at the next term, and a loss of the labor and expense and time already consumed, and the far more serious effect on the public mind. Such things ought not to occur. Where possible, they should be nipped in the bud before they have had time to ripen into damage. It is not necessary to wait for either party to object. The court itself has an interest.’ The public has an interest, and it is a.high privilege which the judge-has to act on his own motion. Civil Code, § 4419; Aug. R. Co. v. Randall, 85 Ga. 319; Farmer v. State, 91 Ga. 720. Where the court acts without being asked, the remedy is far more effect*239ive, and in most cases wiil undo what has been improperly done. Such promptitude will generally obviate the necessity of declaring a mistrial. If, however, the court does not act of its own motion, the injured party may take such action as he thinks appropriate. If he asks that the court rebuke what has been done, with an instruction that the jury should disregard the occurrence and not allow it to influence their verdict, but fails to ask a mistrial, this court can not usually grant any further relief. It is true that in Woolfolk’s case, 81 Ga. 551, and in a. few others like it, a new trial was granted though a motion for a mistrial had not been made. But the facts there were extraordinary, and ought not to furnish a test for cases like the one at bar. The defendant Patton may not have wanted a mistrial; and if the court, without any motion to that effect, had declared one, he might thereafter have claimed tha.t he had been in jeopardy, and could not again be put upon trial. We have already shown that we recognize the embarrassment of a defendant under circumstances like those set out; but where he deliberately fails to ask a mistrial, and where the judge does all he is asked to do by way of rebuke to the offending party, and gives instructions to the jury not to be influenced by what has transpired, there is a legal cure for what has happened. In saying this as judges, we know as men that the effect of the painful scene had not been obliterated from the minds of the jurors.
Judgment reversed.
By three Justices. Fish and Candler, JJ.y dissent.