61 So. 53 | Ala. | 1912
This case was reversed by the Court of Appeals upon two propositions only: The first, because no sufficient predicate was laid for the admission of the testimony of J. M. Baker as to a statement made
Declarations of a defendant prior to the commission of the alleged offense, expressing menace or ill will against the person assaulted or injured, are admissible in evidence against him. — 1 Mayfield’s Dig., pp. 262, 263, and cases cited. This is a different kind of evidence from confessions and inculpatory statements after the commission of the offense, which must be voluntary, but is within the class of declarations against interest, and which are admissible against parties to a cause, civil or criminal, without laying a predicate by first interrogating the party as to whether or not he made same. Ordinary rules do not apply to parties to a cause; their statements are admissions or declarations, and is independent testimony, and no foundation is necessary for the introduction of same. — Jones on Evidence, § 851. To" hold that a predicate must be laid by first asking the party if he made such statements would deny the opposite party the benefit of most material evidence, if the party making the statements did not see fit to testify as a witness. The Court of Appeals erred upon a question of law in holding that the evidence of J. G. Cobb that he heard the defendant at Kennedy, on the day of the trouble between defendant and Gunter, at the store say “he could get something to eat besides at the Gunter Hotel and * * * he would see Gunter later,” was not admissible as evidence because no sufficient predicate had been laid when the defendant was on the stand. It is true it would have been more orderly for the state to have introduced this
Upon appeal it is incumbent upon the appellant to affirmatively show error, and this rule applies to predicates as well as other questions, as the presumption is that the trial court did its duty, and that a predicate was laid, when required, unless it affirmatively appears that it was not properly established. — Price v. State, 117 Ala. 113, 23 South. 691; Whatley v. State, 144 Ala. 75, 39 South. 1014; Gilmore v. State, 126 Ala. 20, 28 South. 595. It seems that the only defect with the predicate for the contradiction of the witness Hollis by J. M. Baker was the failure of the-record to show that a particular time and place was fixed for the conversation, as subsequently proved by J. M. Baker, and which was substantially the same as the one denied by Hollis, though no time and place was fixed in the reply •of Hollis. The questions to Hollis are not set out, and there is nothing in his denial to negative the fact that the time and place was not fixed when he was interrogated as to the conversation with J. M. Baker, and, the appellant not affirmatively showing that the time and place was not fixed, the appellate court could presume that it was embraced in the question to the witness. It may be that the bill of exceptions purports to set out all of the evidence, but it does not purport to set out the questions, and a presumption that the question fixed the time and place is compatible with the record. This is a question, however, of fact or of an application of the facts in the case to the law, and does not involve
In the case of Ex parte Dickens, 162 Ala. 276, 50 South. 219, this court, in discussing its revisory powers over inferior courts, in the absence of a statutory right of appeal, said through Simpson, J., “ ‘By the common law the power is vested in the Supreme Court-to review the orders, proceedings, and judgments of all inferior courts- and tribunals, and pass upon the question of their jurisdiction and decisions on questions of law; but, in the absence of some statute conferring the power of reviewing the determinations of these inferior tribunals upon questions of fact, the action of the court or tribunal is final and conclusive, and cannot be reviewed, revised, or corrected on the common-law writ of certiorari.’- — Harris on Certiorari, p. 10, § 15. Originally, on certiorari, only the questions of jurisdiction was inquired into; but this limit has been removed, and now the court ‘examines the law questions involved in the case which may affect its merits.’ — Id., p. 3, § 1. As a general proposition, certiorari will not be granted in cases where the party seeking it has an adequate remedy by appeal. — Harris on Certiorari, p. 37, §11; A. G. S. R. R. Co. v. Christian, 82 Ala. 307, 309, 1 South. 121.”
For the error of law above suggested the writ of cer
Certiorari to Court of Appeals awarded, and judgment of said Court of Appeals is reversed, and the cause is remanded.