72 So. 590 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1916
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] John Henderson was convicted of an assault and battery, and he appeals. Affirmed. *2 The defendant was charged in an indictment in regular form with an assault with intent to murder, and convicted of an assault and battery.
(1) The court properly allowed the assaulted party, as a state's witness, to narrate the circumstances attending the commission of the assault on him by the defendant, including the fact that the witness' little boy ran up to them, whereupon the defendant drew back in a threatening manner at the boy with a piece of a hoe handle. This was shown to have taken place, according to the testimony of the witness, while the witness was on the ground, where he had been felled by a blow from the defendant, and while begging the defendant not to strike him. All of this grew out of the main altercation and was a part of one continuous transaction, and properly admitted as part of the res gestæ. — Granberry v. State,
(2) It appears from the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions that the court allowed the witness Brown to testify to the fact of a former difficulty with the defendant, and limited his testimony to that, and refused to allow inquiry as to the details of the prior difficulty. The rulings of the court in this particular were entirely correct. — Garrett v.State,
(3) The answer of the witness Brown to the question: "And your father said something, didn't he?" "Yes; Otis was hitting Mr. Henderson with the hoe" — was not responsive, and was properly excluded on that ground. — Fleming v. State,
(4) The testimony of the witnesses Yancey and Whitehurst that the defendant had, a few months before the difficulty, made threats "to get" the assaulted party was properly admitted. It was competent as evincing hostility, malice, and criminal intent. — Walker v. State,
(5) The fact that the solicitor, in the course of his argument, undertook to demonstrate and show how the first blow *3
produced the wound on the assaulted party's head, by illustrating with a stick of wood and the assaulted party, would not constitute reversible error unless the illustration was not supported by, or based upon, the evidence in the case. There is no legitimate inference to be drawn from the evidence and the recitals of the bill of exceptions, as to the solicitor's argument or act in illustrating it, opposed to the conclusion that the illustration was supported by the evidence. An argument which states fairly inferences to be drawn from any fact in the case is proper (Shirley v. State,
(6) The written charge refused to the defendant did not require the evidence of good character sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt to be considered with the other evidence in the case, and was properly refused. — Allen v. State,
We find no reversible error in the record.
Affirmed. *4