62 So. 382 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913
— While the train on which the defendant was a passenger was standing at the station at Townley, some one who was in the smoking compartment between the white and colored sections of the smoking car threw a bottle which struck a child on the station platform, inflicting an injury which at the time seemed to be a serious one. There was direct evidence tending to prove that the defendant was in the compartment mentioned at the time, and that he was in an intoxicated condition, and there was circumstantial evidence tending to prove that he was the person who threw the bottle. On the other hand, there was direct evidence tending to prove that the defendant was not in that compartment Avhen the bottle was thrown, and that one Posey, who also was intoxicated, was there at that time, and there Avas circumstantial evidence tending to prove that Posey threAv the bottle. By sustaining objections interposed by the solicitor the court denied the defendant the opportunity of proving that Posey had a difficulty Avith a negro as he was getting on the train at Birmingham and kicked the negro off the train; that during the trip he had been saying that he would throw a bottle at any negro he saAV on the outside; that he had throAvn out a bottle at a negro at Quinton, another station ; that before reaching still other stations during the trip he gathered several bottles about him and said he Avas going to hit the first negro he saw; and that shortly after the occurrence at ToAvnley he disappeared from that locality, in which he had been living up to that time. Exceptions Avere duly reserved to the action of the court in excluding this evidence.
A doubt as to which of two persons committed a certain act may be dispelled by evidence going to show that such an act was but a continuation of conduct in which one of them had been engaged just prior to the time in question, and carried out threats or intentions which he had very recently expressed and for which he had been making preparation, and that immediately following the act he took measures of protection against the consequences.of it to himself. We do not think that it cán with plausibility be denied that the excluded evidence as to the manner in which Posey’s drunken condition had been manifesting itself throughout the trip could properly be regarded, in connection with other facts in evidence, as pointing to him as the one who was guilty of the offense in question. The conclusion is that the circumstances above mentioned, evidence of which was excluded, were such as, in their connection with other circumstances disclosed by the admitted evidence, might throw some light on the question of who committed the offense with which the defendant was charged and have some tendency to raise a doubt, as to whether he was guilty of it, and that the court erred in excluding evidence of those circumstances.
Reversed and remanded.