Jоhn Virgil Cash, the appellant, was indicted, tried, and convicted with recommendation of mercy, of robbery by use of an offensive weapon and sentenced to life imprisonmеnt.
On appeal to this court he enumerates as error: (1) the giving of an erroneous charge on reasonable doubt; and (2) admitting a pistol in evidence.
The charge complained of is as follows: “If after considering all of the facts and circumstances and evidence in the case, your minds are wavering and unsettled, that is the doubt of the law, and if that should exist, you should acquit the defendant. Nevertheless [sic], Gentlemen, if that doubt does not exist as to the guilt of the defendant, you should convict the defendant in this case.” Appellаnt contends that the charge is erroneous because it imposes upon the accused a greater burden than the law warrants, since a reasonable doubt consсientiously entertained by one or more jurors (less than twelve) should at least entitle defendant to a mistrial. The appellant recognizes that the charge complained of has been approved by this court in
Dumas v. State,
Prior to the charge complained of, the court charged fully the law on reasonable doubt in charging “that defendant enters upon the trial with the presumption of innocence in his favor, which remains with him throughout the trial, and until and unless, the State, by the introduction of еvidence has satisfied your minds beyond a reasonable doubt as to his guilt . . .” (emphasis ours) that the State must “. . . prove the material allegations in the indictment to your satisfaction and beyond a reasonable doubt . . for the jury to convict; and then just prior to the excerpt complained of charged “Now Gentlemen, a reasonable doubt means exaсtly what it says, not a capricious or arbitrary doubt, nor a doubt which does not arise from a consideration of the evidence, but a doubt growing out of the evidence, or from а lack of the evidence, or from a conflict of the evidence.”
The charge complained of is not as contended by appellant subject to the construction that it prevents a mistrial in case one or more of the jurors has a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the defendant. The court simply charged what is meant by a reasonable doubt in the minds of jurors, and charged further that if a reasonable doubt, as thus defined, did not exist in their minds as to his guilt then they should convict the defendant. We do not think any intelligent juror would be confused by this charge into thinking that he was prevented from voting for an acquittal if he had a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the defendant unless all of the other jurors also had a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt. This ground is without merit.
As to the admission of the pistol in evidence, the material evidence was as follows: E.B.I. agents in Los Angeles, California went to a specified address in that city to arrest a woman, Darlene Lewis, alias Mary Morris, on a charge of transporting a stolen automobile across a State line (Dyer Act). They werе acting on information from the F.B.I. that a warrant had been *58 issued in Birmingham, Alabama, for her arrest. They entered the house where she was found and placed her under arrest without incidеnt. The permanent resident of the house began making motions with her head toward a rear bedroom in the residence. The two F.B.I. agents went to the bedroom, opened the door to a closet in the room, and found a man standing therein. He was ordered out of the closet. He gave the officers his name, John Virgil Cash. They did not place him under arrest, but called Los Angeles Police, who came out and placed him under arrest on suspicion of robbery. Incident to the arrest of Darlene Lewis, the agents searched the house, and found the pistol in question lying on top of a three-foot-high box in the closet where defendant was found. It was fully loaded. On the trial of the defendant, the pistol was, over objеction, introduced in evidence as being one similar in appearance to that which was used in the robbery for which Cash was on trial. Cash was identified as the perpetratоr of the robbery and the pistol as being similar in appearance to the one used by Cash in committing the robbery.
The appellant’s contention is that the pistol was obtainеd by an illegal search and seizure and was for that reason inadmissible. The Supreme Court of the United States in Mapp v. Ohio,
The Supreme Court of the United States in Harris v. United States,
The F.B.I. agent testified that after placing Darlene Lewis under arrest and about five minutes after Cash was discovered, he and his fellow agent made a search of the apartment for contraband, or weapons, and particularly, since the charge against her was violation of the Dyer Act, for forged title, keys to operate motor vehicles, and items such as this. This was clearly a reasonable search of the premises incidental to the аrrest of Darlene Lewis, and was a lawful search of the premises.
The pistol found in the closet of one of the rooms was properly admitted in evidence against Cash еven though it was not the property of Darlene Lewis and the search was made incidental to her arrest. In Harris v. United States,
Judgment affirmed.
