76 So. 904 | Ala. | 1917
The defendants, jointly indicted for murder in the first degree, were convicted of murder in the second degree, and their punishment was by the jury fixed at 25 years' servitude in the penitentiary. The sentence of the court was pursuant to the judgment.
The tendency of the state's evidence was to show that the defendants had threatened to kill deceased, and that, in pursuance of such threats, they went in search of him, and, meeting him in the public road, shot him to death. There was a further tendency of the evidence to show that the defendant Ky Hendley fired the fatal shot, and that the defendant Robert Hendley cut the throat of the deceased. That there had been a previous difficulty between these parties was indicated by a further tendency of the evidence.
Under their plea of not guilty defendants deny an unlawful and willful killing of the deceased, and say they acted only in self-defense.
We have been unable to find that this court has ever passed upon the question involved in the insistence of appellants' counsel that the judgment entry does not affirmatively show that the jury did hear the evidence in the case. The reporter will set out the judgment entry.
As will be noted, the judgment entry positively recites that a jury for the trial of the defendants was selected; that the indictment was read to that jury; that the defendants pleaded "not guilty" to the indictment; and that thereupon "came a jury of good and lawful men," "who, being first duly sworn, on oath say," etc. This court has held this recital to be a sufficient averment that the jury were properly sworn. Storey v. State,
As to the sufficient impaneling of the jury, the recitals of the judgment entry are that the jury was selected and sworn, and rendered the verdict. Objection to the impaneling of the jury must be taken in the court below, and exception reserved, in order that the matter may be reviewable by this court. Brassell v. State,
It is the duty of the court to see to it that the jury hear all the evidence in the *548 case; and unless the record shows to the contrary, this court will presume that the trial court discharged its duty in this regard. Brassell v. State, supra.
In the case of Davis v. State,
The recitals in the judgment entry in the instant case were as specific as, if not more so than, those held sufficient in the Davis Case, supra.
There was no error in refusing to allow the witness Tessie Lott to testify what her father and the Hendleys did on the Sunday prior to the killing. This was not a part of the res gestæ, and was irrelevant to the issue. The same is true touching what the witness Sowell testified as to defendants and deceased's being together on the Saturday previous to the homicide.
The defendants might show that they had had a prior difficulty with the deceased, but not the details thereof, to elucidate the reasonable appearance of conditions at the time of the homicide. However, they failed to limit and conduct the inquiry to this line of proof.
The witness Claud Roberts properly gave the facts tending to show that the knife found on the person of the deceased had not been recently opened. L. N. R. R. Co. v. Hayward,
There was no error in refusing to allow the defendants to ask the witness Anna Lott whether she "expected trouble" between the parties. Lambie v. State,
Witness Sowell, having testified that one of the defendants admitted at Bethune's store, in the presence of the other, that they killed the deceased, telling what part each took in the killing, was permitted to state that the first time defendant told the quo modo of the homicide Bethune remarked to defendants that they had better tell it different from that. This evidence does not appear to have been objected to until after the answer. The bill of exceptions recites:
"The defense objected, and moved to exclude what Bethune had said to them. The court overruled the objection, and the defendants excepted."
What a third party said to the defendant during the quasi confession is admissible for the purpose of connecting and rendering intelligible the defendant's statement, if necessary to that end, and also what was said in the presence of two or more defendants, if the statement involves such an accusation against one of them as calls for a denial by him. Poe v. State,
In the case at bar, moreover, the indicated testimony was detailed by another witness, Sowell, without objection by the defendants, or motion to require it to be limited to the defendant making the admission.
Witness Hutto, having testified to the effect that on the day of the murder the defendants, who were returning from the direction of the home of the deceased, told witness that, if he wished to see the deceased, he was down there below the old house with his head in the ditch, was asked by the state, "Did you ask him anything about Lott (meaning the deceased)?" The witness answered, "I did not." There was no error in overruling defendant's objection to this question, nor in refusing to exclude the same. It was competent as tending to illustrate the other testimony. Though this statement was made by only one of the defendants, yet the two defendants were together at the time of this quasi admission by one that called for some explanation or denial on the part of the other if he were innocent of participation in the crime.
The court properly refused to allow the witness Robinson to go into details of the former difficulty between the defendants and the deceased.
The state having introduced no proof tending to show flight, it was proper for the trial court to refuse to allow defendants to show that they did not leave the store until the sheriff came and arrested them. Brown v. State,
Defendants' refused charges 1, 2, 5, 9, 12, and 14, whether good or not, were substantially covered by given charges 3, 15, 16, 20, and 21. Moreover, refused charges 1 and 2 were bad, as pretermitting the defendants' duty to retreat.
Refused charges 4, 5, and 11 sought to instruct the jury to acquit if the defendants were "justified" or "justifiable," and for this reason were properly refused. Said charges did not give the jury the constituent elements of that justification under the law that would excuse the defendants for taking *549
the life of the deceased. The use of the words, "justified" and "justifiable" in the respective charges was ambiguous, and for this reason these charges were properly refused. Roden v. State,
Refused charges 8 and 10 were covered by given charges 7 and 13. Refused charges 18 and 19 are covered likewise by given charge 17.
The law of the case was properly given the jury in the court's oral charge.
No error having been committed on the trial, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and MAYFIELD and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur.