Frazier v. State

116 Ala. 442 | Ala. | 1897

HEAD, J.

The motion in arrest of judgment was properly overruled. The record affirmatively shows that that the prisoner was present at every stage of the proceeding in the trial, court at which the law requires such presence to be so shown by the record. The two grounds Stated in the motion are : 1. That it does not affirmatively appear that he was present, in court, at the time the venire was drawn containing a list of the regular •jurors drawn in said cause; 2, nor at the time the special venire containing a list of special jurors was drawn in said cause.

It was held in Washington v. State, 81 Ala. 35, in passing upon a jury law regulating the drawing of juries *444for the trial of capital cases, similar to the one -which governs this case, that it was not essential that the record affirmatively show that the required drawing was had by the judge. The required acts, in that regard, were deemed ministerial rather than judicial, and the failure of the record to show compliance with them was not ground for arrest of judgment.

As it was not necessary that the record affirmatively show the drawing, it was, of course, unnecessary that it should affirmatively show that the defendant was present when the drawing, if there was one, occurred. The question intended to be raised by the motion in arrest of judgment, should have been a matter of exception reserved by the defendant, and- presented to this court by bill of exceptions.

The case of Hames v. State, 113 Ala. 674, was not intended to lay down a contrary rule, when its facts are considered.

A witness, Dillard, when introduced by the State, was asked by the solicitor: “Do you remember the time Silas Jones is said to have been killed by Joe Frazier?” Objection to the question by the defendant was overruled and exception reserved. The witness answered that he did. Under the facts of this case, there was no reversible error in this ruling. It was a conceded fact that the defendant killed Silas Jones — the deceased named in the indictment — shown by his own voluntary confession and’testimony and by the testimony of Jule Wilson, the only other eye-witness of the homicide. The sole defense made was that of self-defense. The question was put in that form for no other purpose than to call the attention of the witness to the occasion of the homicide, and could have operated no possible injury to the defendant, in view of the undisputed and conceded fact above stated. Without impairing any principle stated in Green v. State, 96 Ala. 29, we hold there was no reversible error in the ruling excepted to.

So, also, the question to the witness, Graw, whether or not deceased was in the habit of squatting down whenever engaged in conversation, related to a matter about which there was no dispute. The solicitor stated that it was for the purpose of showing that the deceased was shot while squatting or sitting down. The testimony of the defendant himself- and Wilson, the only *445other person who was present, showed, expressly and without dispute from any source, that deceased was sitting down on the edge of a ditch at the .time he was shot. If the question, was abstractly erroneous (which we do not decide, but cite as bearing on it, Wiley v. State, 99 Ala. 146), it could have done the defendant no possible harm.

There being no error in the record, of which the defendant can complain, the judgment of the city court must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

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