101 So. 95 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1924
There was a general verdict of the jury finding the defendant guilty as charged in the indictment. The indictment contained two counts; one charging the offense of distilling, making, or manufacturing alcoholic, spirituous, malted, or mixed liquors, some part of which was alcohol, and count 2 the unlawful possession of a still, etc., to be used for the purpose of manufacturing prohibited liquors or beverages contrary to law. Judgment of conviction was duly pronounced and entered, and an indeterminate term of imprisonment in the penitentiary imposed, from which the defendant appealed.
Upon the trial of this case in the court below but one exception was reserved to the ruling of the court upon the admission of testimony. Upon redirect examination of defendant's witness Hense Cornell, he testified that he knew state witness Dan Webster, and that according to his (Webster's) statement his feelings toward Mr. Sterling Fannin (defendant) are pretty bad. Defendant's counsel then asked his witness, "Do you know of his carrying a gun for Mr. Fannin?" The court sustained the state's objection to this question, and defendant duly excepted. There was no error in this ruling. In the first place, the question called for a conclusion or opinion of the witness, and for this reason the objection was well taken. But, if this was not true, the defendant got the benefit of the testimony sought by having been allowed to state without objection, *123 while testifying in his own behalf, "I know of his [Webster's] carrying a gun for me."
In the bill of exceptions appear the statements in parenthesis:
"The clerk will here set out as a part of this bill of exceptions the general oral charge of the court in this cause."
"The clerk will here set out each of said given charges separately, as a part of this bill of exceptions."
"The clerk will here set out separately each of said charges which were refused by the court as a part of this bill of exceptions."
The oral charge of the court is not set out in any part of the transcript, nor are the given and refused charges in the record or bill of exceptions. By a submission of this cause in this court in its present condition — that is, without the oral charge and special charges — the appellant is deprived of the benefit of such questions as might have been thereby presented.
Acts 1915, p. 815, provides:
"In case of appeal the charges must be set out in the transcript [record] in the following manner: (1) The charge of the court. (2) The charges given at request of * * * the state. (3) The charges given at request of the defendant. (4) The charges refused to appellant."
And when so incorporated in the record "it shall be presumed that each charge was separately requested" and that an exception was reserved to the giving or refusal thereof.
The questions above discussed are not insisted upon in brief of counsel for appellant, and this may indicate that no reversal of the judgment is insisted upon in this connection. But the statute (Code 1907, § 6264) imposes upon this court the duty of considering all questions apparent on the record, or reserved by bill of exceptions, and provides that no assignment of error is necessary, and in pursuance thereto the questions above discussed have had our consideration.
The insistence is made, however, that the indictment upon which this defendant was tried and convicted is void, because it was preferred and returned into open court by a grand jury illegally constituted, in that one J.C. McGarr was sworn in as one of said grand jury, and was one of the 18 who composed the grand jury which found this indictment, and that the name of said J.C. McGarr does not appear on the venire of jurors drawn and summoned to serve as grand and petit jurors for said term of court. By reference to the regular venire, consisting of 65 names, we find the name of John W. McGarr (No. 48). The record also shows that the presiding judge in open court (after duly qualifying the jurors and passing upon excuses) drew the names of 18 qualified jurors to serve as the grand jury, and included in this number the name of J.C. McGarr was drawn, and this juror was among those impaneled and sworn as the grand jury to serve at said term of court.
It cannot be conceded that John W. McGarr and J.C. McGarr are two separate and distinct individuals, as contended by appellant. No proof was offered in the lower court in this connection; in fact, the question was not raised in the lower court. The law does not take cognizance of middle names or middle initials. In other words, the law knows of but one Christian name. The insertion or omission of a middle name or initial is therefore immaterial, and may be disregarded. Edmundson v. State,
The statute also provides that no objection to an indictment on any ground going to the formation of the grand jury which found the same can be taken, except by plea in abatement to the indictment, and the only authorized ground upon which to predicate such plea in abatement is that the grand jurors who found the indictment were not drawn by the officer designated by law to draw the same. In the instant case no plea in abatement was filed in the lower court, nor was the validity of the indictment, or legality of the grand jury, questioned in any manner; but for the first time, on appeal in this court, the question is presented and the insistence made.
Appellant insists that the objection to the indictment, upon the grounds stated, is available on appeal, although not raised on the trial in the circuit court. To sustain this contention we are cited the cases of Finley v. State,
*124"transcript must not contain mere orders of continuance, nor the organization of the grand jury which found the indictment, nor the venire for any grand or petit jury, nor the organization of regular juries for the week or term at which the case was tried, * * * unless some question thereon was raised before the trial court; but, in the absence of any such question, such proceedings are, upon appeal, presumed to have been regular and legal." Acts 1915, p. 708.
No question having been raised in the lower court as to the legality of the grand jury or validity of the indictment, this court, under the now existing rule of practice, supra, must presume these matters to have been in all things regular and legal, and the contention here made for the first time must be held to be without merit. Paitry v. State,
No error is apparent on the record. The rulings of the court are free from error. No other questions are presented for review. The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed.