50 Fla. 4 | Fla. | 1905
At a special term of the Circuit Court of Leon county held in January, 1905, the grand jury found and presented an indictment against Isham Edwards, George Caldwell and Nelson Larkins containing two
There are eight assignments of error here, viz: First and second, the court erred by refusing to sustain the plaintiffs objection to that part of the testimony of Marshall Courtney, in which a conversation took place between «aid Courtney and one Isham Edwards who was an accomplice and jointly indicted with the defendants in error, to-wit: “Isham Edwards was in the buggy with me and George Caldwell was in the road cart with Mr. Munford right behind. I had a conversation with Isham which was entirely voluntary on his part. George was in the road cart just behind the buggy, the length of a horse to the buggy and was close enough to have heard the
In the case of Kissinger v. Staley, 44 Neb. 783, 63 N. W. Rep. 55, the court in its opinion on page 786, says: “If the testimony, of the admission of which complaint is made, was erroneous, it can not avail the plaintiff in error, for the reason that the record is not in such condition as to raise or present the question of the correctness of its admission. If it was given in response to an interrogatory, there should have been a proper objection to the interrogatory and a ruling obtained thereon, and, if adverse, an exception taken. If the evidence claimed to be objectionable was recited in a narrative form or volunteered by the witness, or if given in answer to a question
The third and fourth assignments of error are based on action of the trial judge in overruling objections to the testimony of Charles Dickenson “ who testified that Isham Edwards said that George Caldwell took the gun and shot Mr. Eppes.” Mr. Dickenson’s testimony is given in narrative form in the record and- is as follows: “That he was on the train which was conveying the three prisoners Nelson Larkins, George Caldwell and Isham Edwards to Jacksonville after the death of Mr. Eppes, and that while on the train he heard Edwards say that he (Edwards) was sitting on Larkins’ store porch, when Mr. Eppes passed just after dark, and that Nelson Larkins,
The only other assignment of error which is argued is based on the ruling of the court denying a motion for a
Isham Edwards'’ testimony is given in narrative form in. the record and is as follows: “The witness here stated, in minute detail the people he met on the road, where- and when he put up his horse (it appears from other testimony that he had been to Tallahassee) when and where-he met Caldwell after dark, where they were when Eppes passed (Eppes had also been to Tallahassee and was returning home) and about their talking about killing, Ep-pes before the buggy came by. I did make the statements referred to by Mr. Langston, Mr. Courtney and Mr. Dickenson. The first statement I told Mr. Langston and Mr. Courtney is- true. We were all three together, and George Caldwell did the shooting, and I spent that night with Nelson Larkin, and in the morning a person of the name of.....................came there and waked us*
On cross-examination Isham Edwards admitted having given statements in regard to the killing of Mr. Eppes to Mr. Jones and others, different from the one he gave on the stand, and said in explanation “This same Bill Alford said he was going to beat me if I did not make this last statement, and I was afraid he would beat me.” It appears from the testimony that Mr. Eppes was shot and killed in his buggy on the Bradfordville road, and according to the evidence of Isham Edwards the only witness who testified to seeing the murder — a little north of Larkins’ store on September 3rd, 190á. We can infer from the evidence that it was sometime after dark on the evening of that day. There is nothing in the testimony from which we can fix with anything like exactness the time when he was shot. A pool of blood was found in the road, and the tracks of three men near this spot. One ■cas the track of Isham Edwards and the other two tracks are not identified. They went north from where the pool of blood was discovered. An empty twelve gauge shell was found near this spot. The witness Courtney went to Larkins’ store and asked if he had a gun. He said he had one but did not know whether it was there or not. Courtney told him, he Courtney must have the gun. Larkins reached under the counter and pulled out a gun, a twelve gauge double barrelled shot gun. The shell found in the road had a peculiar indentation on it, and upon examination it was found that the rebounding
Robert Robinson testified that on Saturday afternoon September 3rd, 1904, he sold Isham Edwards three twelve guage shells loaded with No. 7 shot. Caldwell lived about two and a half miles north of Larkins’ store. He was arrested by Deputy Sheriff Langston late on the night after Mr. Eppes was killed, near a church which was near Larkins’ store. Langston saw him jumping across the road in his shirt sleeves. Caldwell said he had been to church. Larkins told Mr. Whitehead, a witness, early Sunday morning, September 4th, 1904, that he locked up his store at half past seven o’clock, and started away, and that he heard a gun fire and that the gun was a muzzle loading gun because he heard the cap snap and then the gun shoot. He supposed it was the shot that killed Mr. Eppes. Mr. Eppes was shot in the head with No. 7 shot at close range. He is supposed to have been shot where the pool of blood was found, between the seven and eight mile post from Tallahassee. George Caldwell introduced several witnesses to prove an alibi. Mack Davisi testified that he left Tallahassee at early sundown and passed Caldwell and last saw him going up Yason’s hill, three miles from town. This was about sundown, and the place was about four and a half miles from Larkins’ store. He saw Isham Edwards standing by the road near the church which is about one-quarter
Jennie Kamey testified that when she left Tallahassee the day Mr. Eppes was killed it was nearly dark. She took George Caldwell in the wagon with her, and when they got a mile from town came to Mack Davis and Nat Turner (Hunter) watering their horsesi at a well. They drove on and left George and witness at the well. She lives five miles from Tallahassee with Mr. Craig’s people. George Caldwell rode with her until she came to the road turning off from the main road to her house. It was night when Caldwell left her.
Mamie Chaires testified that on the day Mr. Eppes was killed she met Isham Edwards with a gun- as she was going to Larkins’ store. She reached Larkin’s store about
It is evident also that his statement like that of Mamie Chaires as to the time of closing the store does not agree with Larkins’ statement to Mr. Whitehead. Larkins stated to Mr. Whitehead that he closed his store about half past seven o’clock and soon after heard the shot that
In view of the fact that no witness fixes the time when Mr. Eppes was killed, except that it was after dark, it is evident that the evidence of an alibi was. not of that character Which must necessarily have produced a reasonable doubt of the presence of Caldwell at the killing of Eppes. The shot which some of the witnesses say they heard may or may not have been the one that killed Eppes, and as to this shot, the time when it was heard is not fixed with anything like precision. If Caldwell was at Yason’s hill at sundown, about half past six o’clock, four and a half miles from Larkins’ store, it is consistent with reason that he might have walked the intervening distance and have been at Larkins’ store with Larkins and Isham Edwards just as Edwards testified he was; that is to say sometime after dark. This court held in Bacon v. State, 22 Fla. 51, and in Adams v. State, 28 Fla. 511, text 541, 10 South. Rep. 106, that to make the defense of an alibi available the evidence of its existence must cover the whole time when the presence of the defendant was required, and that it is .sufficient if it raises a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury whether or not the accused was present at the killing. See, also, Murphy v. State, 31 Fla. 166, 12 South. Rep. 453. The jury, however, are the judges of the credibility of the witnesses and of the weight and sufficiency of the evidence, and in view of all the evidence we are not able to say that they erred in not sustaining this plea and acquitting the defendants. As to the testimony of Isham Edwards who according to his own statement was an accomplice in the crime of killing Mr. Eppes, the law in this State is settled that such
Where there is evidence to support a verdict and its propriety depends on the credibility of witness the appellate court can not interfere. McNish v. State, 45 Fla. 83, 36 South. Rep. 176.
The judgment® and sentences of the trial court are affirmed.