103 Ala. 36 | Ala. | 1893
Appellant was convicted of murder and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for life. One Oscar Crowder, a son of deceased, testified that he was with his father in a certain corn-field when the latter was shot by some one hid in the woods or bushes near by. As soon as the gun fired, he raised up, and seeing his father fall over, he turned around and saw a man in the act of running. He stepped to the left to see if he could see him and tell who he was ; and stepping 5 or 6 steps saw the man running. Until then the smoke and
The State introduced evidence of threats made by the defendant against the deceased, at different times, extending over a period from about twelve months, to within about two weeks, before the killing. In the oral charge, the court said to the j ury, in treating of the subject of .threats : “So the probative force of the threat would be increased if it was frequently repeated during the whole time intervening between its first utterance and the doing of the original act and the same cause for ill will and hate continued to exist. Then it would be imputed to a malignant spirit and a purpose that may have been vacillating but at last became fixed and settled.” The defendant excepted to this instruction, and now argues that it invaded the province of the jury. In the same connection, the court had said that, “If threats were made, their weight is to be determined by the jury. If a long period intervenes, during which there were opportunities of doing the threatened injury, and there was no attempt to do it, and no repetition of the threat, it would be but a slight circumstance in connecting the accused with the injury, and there would be more reason for regarding it as having been a mere careless utterance, or idle bravado, or ebullition of passion;” and the court, concluded what it had to say, on this subject, with the remark, “But, as before stated, if any threats are proven their weight must be determined by the jury.” It will
The court, in its oral charge, gave the following instruction, which was excepted to : “It is obviously essential to the proof of an alibi that it should cover and account for the whole of the time of the transaction in question, or at least so much of it as to render it impossible that the prisoner could have committed the imputed act.” Under the evidence tending to prove an alibi, if true,,it may have been possible for the defendant to have committed the crime; but its character was such that it was most clearly for the jury to determine whether, if the evidence was true, he availed him self of the possibility it afforded. Similar instructions were declared erroneous, for reasons there given, which we need not repeat, in the following cases : McAnally v. The State, 74 Ala. 9 ; Albritton v. The State, 94 Ala. 76; Pate v. The State, 94 Ala. 14.
Reversed and remanded.