73 So. 134 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1916
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] Eugene Chappell was convicted of manslaughter, and he appeals. Affirmed.
Defendant was charged with having killed McCoy by cutting him with a knife, a stab wound in the lung from which he died about a month later. The doctor testified that the wound was fatal. Tom Patterson testified to seeing McCoy on Monday after he was cut on Saturday night, that he had a conversation with him, and he was asked by defendant the question set out in the opinion. The excerpt to the oral charge set out is as follows:
Proof of defendant's good character may not be considered by the jury in determining the credibility of his testimony unless his character is first assailed by the state.
Charge 5 is as follows:
I charge you that, if you believe that defendant acted in self-defense, then you cannot convict defendant. The defendant was indicted for murder in the second degree, convicted of manslaughter, in the second degree, and appeals from that judgment of conviction.
(1) The statements of the deceased which the defendant sought to elicit by questions to which the court sustained objections *229
interposed by the solicitor are shown to have been made some time after the difficulty, constituted no part of the res gestæ, were merely hearsay, and inadmissible. — Long v.State,
The question propounded by the defendant to the witness Patterson, "Did he [deceased] tell you he brought on the trouble and that was the cause of his being cut?" called for a statement of the deceased separated too far in point of time and place from the difficulty to be a part of the res gestæ. It was merely hearsay, and not admissible against the state's objection. — Long v. State, supra.
(2, 3) The exceptions reserved by the defendant to the questions propounded to the defendant when being examined as a witness in his own behalf relate to what he had heard some time previous to the difficulty concerning improper relations between the deceased and his wife, and the conversation between the defendant and deceased on the subject had no tendency to prove or disprove any issue before the jury. No threat or anything else was sought to be elicited that would make this evidence competent. At most, the evidence could only legitimately serve to show a motive on the part of the defendant to attack or kill the deceased, and its exclusion could not be said, in this sense, to be prejudicial to the defendant. The evident idea of seeking to introduce it was to excite the sympathy of the jury, and for this purpose it was not admissible.
(4, 5) The excerpt of the oral charge set out in the transcript to which an exception was reserved correctly states the law applicable to that phase of the case. — Hays v. State,
(6, 7) Charge I and 4 (considering the charges numbered in the order in which they are set out in the record) are the general charges in favor of the defendant, and were properly refused. — Hargrove v. State,
(8) Charge No. 5 was properly refused as referring a question of law to the jury. — Garth v. State,
We find no error in the record.
Affirmed.