Defendants were jointly indicted and tried for the murder of Bertha Mae Goode. Their motions for a severance were overruled. The jury found both defendants guilty of voluntary manslaughter. Defendant Askew testified that he was drunk and did not remember the incident. Defendant Hammett then took the stand and testified that Askew shot the deceased. After completion of his direct testimony, the district attorney cross examined Hammett as follows:
"A... Ill swear on the Bible that I didn’t kill her, but I’ll swear on the Bible that he did. Q. Do you think anybody would pay any attention to you? A. Well, they been, I’ve been right so far. Q. Have you? A. Right. Q. What do you mean, you’ve been right so far? All of your life you’ve been a good boy? A. I try to be a good boy. I ain’t been nothing but a hard worker. That’s all. Q. You ain’t been nothing but a hard worker? A. That’s right. All of my life. Q. You never did mistreat nobody? A. No sir.”
Upon objection by counsel for Hammett the district attorney said he would not pursue the matter but counsel *57 for Askew contended that Hammett’s character had been placed in evidence and offered an indictment for murder and a conviction for voluntary manslaughter in which Hammett had entered a plea of guilty. The court admitted the evidence of the prior conviction. Appellant Hammett appeals, contending that his character was improperly placed in issue, the prior conviction should not have been admitted, and the additional evidence denied him the right to opening and closing argument. The defendant Askew appeals on the ground that there is insufficient corroboration of the statement of his co-defendant. Held:
1. The general character of the defendant is irrelevant and inadmissible unless he chooses to put it in issue.
Walker v. State,
2. Appellant Askew asserts that the court erred in denying his motion for a new trial on the ground that the testimony of the alleged accomplice, Clarence Hammett, was not supported by sufficient corroborating evidence. We agree. These co-defendants were jointly indicted, tried and convicted. The state contended, and apparently proved to the satisfaction of the trial court and jury, that
*58
they were jointly liable for the death of the deceased. Thus, although defendant Hammett provided the only evidence of events surrounding the actual death of the deceased, and denied that he took any part in the planning or infliction of the mortal wound, the state’s indictment, trial and conviction of both accused as joint participants necessitates this court’s application of the rule that to sustain a conviction for a felony, the testimony corroborating that of the accomplice must be sufficient to connect the defendant with the perpetration of the crime and tend to show his participation therein.
McPherson v. State,
Our appellate courts have repeatedly held: ". . . to sustain a conviction . . . upon the testimony of an accomplice, there must be corroborating facts or circumstances, which, in themselves and independently of the testimony of an accomplice, directly connect the defendant with the crime, or lead to the inference that he is guilty, and more than sufficient to merely cast on the defendant a grave suspicion of guilt.”
Price v. State,
3. The remaining enumerations of error do not require discussion as they are either moot, without merit, or are unlikely to occur on a new trial.
Judgments reversed.
