100 So. 616 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1924
Under the procedure in this state, a person accused of crime is required, upon trial, to answer only the specific charge contained in the accusation, whether by complaint or indictment, and none other.
Upon the trial of a defendant charged by indictment with murder, it is error of a highly prejudicial nature to permit the state to offer evidence of the general bad character of the defendant as being dangerous, violent, turbulent, and bloodthirsty, where no such issue has been injected into the trial by the defendant and no attempt made by the defendant to sustain her character in any manner.
In the absence of proof, there is no presumption as to character being good or bad, as the law raises no such presumption. Richard Steele v. State,
The presumption indulged in a criminal case is that the accused is innocent of the crime charged. This presumption is evidentiary in its nature and attends the accused throughout the trial or until the state, by legal evidence, has proven the guilt of the defendant to the satisfaction of the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, and to a moral certainty. However bad the character of a person charged with crime may be, even though such bad character may relate to the particular trait involved in the nature of the charge, a defendant cannot be convicted because of such bad character only, and evidence thereof is inadmissible as independent evidence to be offered by the prosecution. Evidence of the character of defendant is admissible only when such issue has been made by the defendant; except, of course, where the accused testifies as a witness in his own behalf, in which event he is subject to impeachment as would be any other witness but this must be limited by the court to the purpose of impeaching the defendant's credibility as a witness. Smith v. State,
In the instant case the court permitted the solicitor, over the objection of defendant, to prove by state witnesses Williams and Ross, police officers, that the defendant's character was that of a bloodthirsty, turbulent, dangerous woman. And the witness Ross was also allowed to state, "I have arrested her many times." In these rulings the court committed reversible error. The character of the accused for violence or turbulence sheds no light on her credibility as a witness, and such evidence was inadmissible, as the defendant did not put her character for peace in issue. Sweatt v. State, supra. In Forman v. State, supra, the court said:
"In this case the defendant testified in his own behalf as a witness, but he offered no evidence as to his general character or as to his general character for peace and quiet. This being the situation, the state had no right, against the seasonable objection of the defendant, to offer evidence tending to show that the defendant was a man whose general character for peace and quiet was bad; and in permitting the state, against the seasonable objection of the defendant, to offer this evidence to the jury, the trial court committed reversible error."
After the testimony was closed, the court instructed the jury not to consider the testimony which had been allowed by the court as to the reputation of defendant for bloodthirstiness, or fighting character. This was wholly inadequate to right the wrong that had been done, and it is clearly apparent that, had the court made more decisive effort in this direction, it would have been difficult, if not impossible, to have done so. As stated, this testimony was of a highly prejudicial nature, and, being illegal, the harm could not be eradicated by a mere formal statement by the court, such as was used in this case. Moreover, by the testimony of said witnesses other imputations than that of "bloodthirstiness or fighting character" had been cast upon the character of defendant, and these imputations, even under the instructions given, remained with the jury. Furthermore, the statement of witness Ceph Ross, "I have arrested her lots of times," had no place in the trial of this defendant. The court should have granted defendant's motion to exclude this testimony.
When prejudicial illegal testimony has been admitted, it is always a serious question as to how far such testimony, though withdrawn in the most explicit and emphatic manner, has injuriously affected the defendant. In the case of Maryland Casualty Co. v. McCallum,
We cannot approve the practice here indulged, however unintentional it may have been; for to do so would result in establishing a precedent which in many cases might be hurtful in the extreme. The question under discussion is a simple one, elementary in its nature, and has been dealt with so often by the appellate courts of this state, it should be a familiar proposition of law to every attorney at the bar and certainly to all trial judges; and to the solicitors who represent the state in the trial of criminal cases. It is not proper practice to burden a defendant's case by introducing in evidence patently illegal, irrelevant, inadmissible, and prejudicial facts, and allow this evidence to remain with the jury throughout the trial and until all the testimony is in, and then to simply tell the jury not to consider it. As stated in Cassemus v. State,
Upon the trial of this case innumerable objections were interposed and numerous exceptions reserved to the rulings of the court upon the testimony. We shall not undertake to discuss these questions in detail. Many of them are wholly without merit.
Refused charge 2 was fairly and substantially covered by the court's oral charge. Moreover, the charge is abstract as applied to the facts in this case. The charge was properly refused.
Charge 3 refused to defendant was covered by given charge 49 and by the court's oral charge.
Such propositions of law as are correct, contained in refused charges 7, 8, 10, 18, 19, 20 were fairly and substantially covered by the court's oral charge and by given charges.
There was error in refusing charges 13, 48, and 50. Peagler v. State,
For the errors designated, the judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.