91 So. 499 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1921
The testimony for the state disclosed a state of facts which, if true, more than justified the verdict rendered by the jury, and, in connection with these facts and as a part of them, it developed that the defendant had for more than 25 years been living in a state of open adultery and using the children of the adulterous intercourse, as they became old enough, in the illicit manufacture and sale of whisky. It further appears that the adulterous relation between the defendant and the mother of the children must have begun before the mother was 20 years of age. All of this evidence was brought out in connection with the homicide, to show the relations between the parties and in explanation of circumstances surrounding the killing. Comment upon this evidence by counsel, as it affected the guilt of innocence of the defendant, was legitimate, not that the should be convicted on the charge of murder, by reason of those facts, but in explanation of his acts, his motives, and the weight that the jury should give to his testimony. For this purpose the solicitor might state what the facts showed and draw inferences of guilt as charged, from the facts proven. But the defendant was not on trial for being a criminal all his life, or for raising a family of bastard children, or for seducing the girl, the mother of the bastards; nor was he on trial on a *282 charge of illicit distilling or training his children to be wild-catters. The solicitor in his closing argument to the jury said:
"Gentlemen of the jury, you have before you an old criminal. He has been a criminal all his life and ought to be put up for the rest of his days. He has raised this family of bastard children and brought them up and trained them up and trained them to be wild-catters. He took that girl, their mother, and seduced her at 15 years of age."
The defendant was on trial charged with the killing of George Stephens, and it was the duty of the court and the solicitor to see that he was tried, and, if guilty, convicted of that offense and his punishment fixed, based upon that verdict, uninfluenced, as far as possible, by incidental proof of other violations of law. Coming as it did, at the close of a long trial, in which many witnesses had testified for the state to facts and circumstances tending to impress the jury along the lines of the remarks of the solicitor, and during the closing address of the solicitor to the jury, the remarks were subject to the objection interposed, and the court properly so ruled. The ruling of the court was clear and to the point raised. It is true the court in making the ruling also said "My recollection the only testimony is that he was convicted one time, that he has not been convicted several times," and the solicitor then said, "That is an inference I draw from the testimony." But as to this remark of the court and of the solicitor, there was objection by defendant, and the court said: "No, gentlemen of the jury, I sustain the objection. You will not consider that." According to the record, the defendant excepted to this ruling of the court, made in response to his objection. In dealing with the objections to the remark of the solicitor, the court each time and promptly ruled with defendant. In Moulton v. State,
Speaking of the conclusion of this court as to reversal on error for improper statements by counsel in argument, "there must be objection in the court below, the objection overruled, and an exception reserved."
In the case at bar the objection was sustained. In Birmingham Ry., L. P. Co. v. Drennen,
"This court, on appeal, can only review the actions and rulings of the trial courts, and not those of counsel."
The trial court, having ruled with the defendant with reference to the solicitor's remarks, was not entitled to an exception, and, no motion for a new trial having been made and overruled, this court cannot give to the defendant the benefit of a consideration of a question not presented as was the case in Cassemus v. State,
The written charges requested by defendant and refused by the court, in so far as they assert correct principles of law, are fully and amply covered by the oral charge of the court and the written charges given at the request of defendant.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.