120 Ala. 269 | Ala. | 1898
Evans, the appellant, was defendant in the court below to an indictment for the murder of Parker Rowe. The evidence showed that Rowe was killed with a knife, the arteries and veins being severed on each side of the throat. There were two or three incisions on each side of the throat and neck. On the trial the court, against defendant's objection, allowed a non-expert witness, who examined the wounds, to testify that “they looked like they had been cut from the front of the throat back toward the ear.” This witness went on to further testify that “the gashes were deeper in front part of the throat, cuts were almost together, but toward the ears - they became shallower and further apart, the severed skin in edge of gashes were grained toward the ear, one gash left the throat and cut the lower portion of the ear, [one] gash left the throat and run up on jaw.” It would seem that the admission of the evidence objected to was proper, (Perry v. State, 87 Ala. 30; Watkins v. State, 89 Ala. 82), though the case of Nave v. Ala. Gt. So. R'y Co., 96 Ala. 264, casts some doubt upon it; but, whether so or not, under the influ
The court in its general charge instructed the jury as follows ; “Life cannot be taken to arrest any other than a felonious assault, or an attempt to commit a forcible felony,” and again : “If an assault is not felonious, however it may mitigate, it cannot justify the taking of human life.” In other parts of the general charge there is announced the principle that the danger which will justify taking life to save life need only be apparent, so that construing the whole charge, as we must, together, the clauses copied above are not open to the objection that they authorize self-defense only to arrest actual danger of a felonious nature.
Moréover, these charges considered abstractly do not impugn upon that principle. They deal only with cases of actual assault, and they mean only that where there is an actual assault it must be of the character stated, else life cannot be take in resistance of it. And at most it would seem that the omission of reference in the charges to defendant’s right to act upon apparent, as well as upon actual danger could only serve to give them- a misleading tendency which should have been corrected by requests for explanatoiy charges, and which will not justify a reversal of the judgment.—Poe v. State, 87 Ala. 65, 69-70.
But, coming to the merits of the instructions apart from the objection to them we have been considering, it is found that they were taken bodily and literally from
We have discussed the questions treated of in appellant’s brief. There are several other questions presented by the record. These we have duly considered. The rulings involving them are, however, so patently free from error, or lacking in prej udice to the appellant, that we deem it unnecessary to discuss them.
The judgment is affirmed.