Coppin v. State

123 Ala. 58 | Ala. | 1898

TYSON, J.

Tlie authority of the judge Avho tried the case to sign the'bill of exceptions terminated with the expiration of his term of office. By express provision power is conferred upon this court to establish a bill of exceptions Avhere the judge aaTio presided at the trial of the cause, dies, resigns or is impeached, or if the term of his office expires within the time alloAved by an order of the court in aaTlicli the bill may he signed in vacation. (T)de, £ (522. The bill of exceptions in this case was filed with the clerk of the circuit court Avithin the time prescribed by the order of the court and there is no dispute as to its correctness. The motion to establish it is granted.

The method adopted by defendant’s counsel in Avaiting until after the Avitness had fully deposed to all the facts Avithin his knowledge and doubtless elicited by questions to Avhich ansAvers Avere responsive, and then moving to exclude either the Avhole of the Avitness’ testimony or parts of it, is not to he commended as the proper practice to reserve exceptions. He should not and cannot be alloAved to permit, without objection, his adversary to propound questions, elicit responsive answers from the Avitness and then, after the Avitness has been discharged, move to exclude the testimony in its entirety or a portion of it and procure a reversal of the cause in the event of a conviction should any fact disclosed in the testimony of the Avitness be illegal or irrelevant to the issue. This is the Avildest sort of speculation and finds no lodgment in fair or impartial judicial proceedings.—Billingsley v. The State, 96 Ala. 126; McCalman v. The State, 96 Ala. 98; Traylor v. The State, 100 Ala. 142.

This doctrine in noAvise impinges the general rule that *62tlie “court may exclude illegal testimony at any stage of the trial.” — 1 Brick. Big. 887, § 1190.

There is some want of harmony in our decisions upon this point, hut the true rule seems to us to be, that if the question asked seeks to elicit illegal or irrelevant testimony and the answer is responsive, and the party against whom it is offered makes no objection, this is one of the exceptions to the general rule. In other words, the general doctrine is limited in its application to that class .of cases where illegal testimony is offered against a party without his fault or without subjecting himself to the criticism of speculating upon the chances for a response favorable to him. —Townsend v. Jeffries, Admr., 24 Ala. 329.

Charge No. 1 requested by defendant has been so often condemned by this court, that we must decline to enter into a discussion of its merits or demerits.—Dabney v. The State, 113 Ala. 38, and authorities there cited.

Charge 2 was misleading in assuming that Polly Brock was being tried jointly with the defendant. This was an unwarranted assumption of a fact which had no existence. On the contrary, the record discloses that at her instance a severance Ayas granted.

Charge 3 Avas properly refused. There was sufficient evidence from Avhich the jury could reasonably infer the guilt of the defendant as charged.—Brown v. The State, 108 Ala. 18; Lawson v. The State, 20 Ala. 65.

The remaining question grows out of the exception reserved to the comments of the solicitor. A majority of the court are of the opinion that the trial court should have excluded the remarks of the solicitor, and the refusal of the court to do so was error. They base their opinion for so holding upon the authority of Polly Brock v. State, 123 Ala. 24, which Avas an appeal from a judgment of conviction of Brock Avho Avas jointly indicted with this defendant but tried separately, from which decision the writer of this opinion dissented and expressed his dissent at some length. What I then said is applicable to this case and I Avill not now repeat it.

*63In addition to what I there said in my dissenting views I Avill here add, that the evidence in this case introduced by the State established the fact of the presence of the defendant in the house of Polly Brock on two different occasions, Avhich Avas a house of known ill repute and their being in the1 woods together the day of their arrest and her frequent meetings Avith him in the vicinity of the Louisville & Nashville shops. The only evidence offered by the defendant was his general good character and his absence from Florence from March 11th to July 2d. All of which may have been true and yet not have materially controverted the facts established lev the evidence introduced by the State, and I may say, did not as a matter of fact- contradict them.

The objection to the remarks of the solicitor was based solely upon the ground “that the failure of Polly Brock to testify could not be commented upon.” This may or may not Lace been true, dependent upon the solution of the question as to Avliether or not the defendant was called upon to explain or rebut the criminating circumstances by her avIio possessed peculiar knoAvledge of the facts and she Avas accessible to him. Her accessibility as a witness to the State does not legitimately enter into a consideration of the question. But conceding for the sake of argument that the opinion of the majority of the court states the rule correctly in holding that if Polly Brock was accessible to both parties then no presumption could be indulged against the defendant for failure to explain the criminating circumstances, yet it cannot be said Avith any degree of fairness that she was accessible to the State. The record discloses that she was jointly indicted with the defendant, and on motion a severance Avas granted and an order entered for their separate trial. It does not appear from the record whether she had been tried Avhen the trial of the defendant was had, or Avhether she Avas still awaiting to be tried upon the charge against her. Assuming she Avas yet to be tried, which we cannot do Avith out violating the rule that all j>resumptions must be indulged in favor of the correctness of the judgment of the lower court, it would have availed the State nothing to have offered to prove by her that she met the defendant in *64the woods, since she could have refused to have answered the question as tending to incriminate her upon the same charge. For had she so testified the evidence so deposed to liy her would have been competent against her upon the trial of her case. She was then an incompetent witness for the ¡átate, or perhaps to state the proposition more accurately her competency was dependent upon her volition. If she chose to testify to those criminating circumstances she could do so, or she could have refused to do so. No such consideration can he indulged, had she been called by the defendant if she could have honestly testified that the incriminating circumstances offered against the defendant had been untrue. She could have said they were untrue, and by so doing would not in any degree have tended to incriminate her or to have degraded her. His failure to have her to say that they were untrue, subjected him to the unfavorable inference which the jury was authorized to draw that she could not truthfully contradict them.

Polly Brock being present in court, accessible to the defendant and possessing peculiar knowledge of the facts, the defendant should have introduced her as a witness; failing in this respect, it is my opinion that the remarks of the solicitor were proper. See authorities cited in my dissenting opinion in case of Brock v. The State, 123 Ala. 24.

Reversed and remanded.

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