72 So. 764 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1916
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] Cosco Huguley, alias Coscoe Huguley, was convicted of murder in the second degree, and he appeals. Affirmed.
The matters concerning which the opinion treats sufficiently appear therefrom. As a sample of the refused charges concerning the right of dwelling or curtilage, charge 3 is as follows:
(3) The court charges the jury that there is no evidence in this case which as a matter of law makes the defendant at fault in bringing on the difficulty.
(4) If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant, at the time of the killing, was near the front veranda of his store, where he was carrying on a mercantile business, and on the land belonging to said building and used by the defendant in connection therewith, and was within the curtilage thereof, and which was occupied by him as a place of business, and that he was there assailed by the deceased, under circumstances such as to reasonably impress defendant with the belief that his assailant intended to inflict on him great bodily harm, and also that there was imminent danger that such injury would be inflicted upon defendant, then the defendant had the right to repel such assault by shooting deceased, and he must be acquited, provided defendant did nothing to provoke the assault. (1-3) It is contended by counsel that the judgment entry fails to show that the box from which the names of the jurors to constitute the special venire were drawn was "shaken" before the names were drawn, and that it does not appear that the names were "publicly" drawn, as required by section 7263 of the Code of 1907. Under the provisions of the present jury law, no objection can be taken to any venire of jurors except for fraud in drawing or summoning the jurors. — Acts 1909, p. 317, § 29. It has frequently been held that section 32 of the jury law, under the provisions of which the jury in the instant case was drawn, is mandatory in its requirements in capital cases as to the duties prescribed and benefits intended.
"But the defendant cannot justly complain of mere informalities which do not in any way affect the number, or personnel, or character of the veniremen provided for his selection of jurymen." — Waldrop v. State,
We think the order of the court shows a compliance with the provisions of the statute in respect to drawing the special venire. It is stated in the order that the judge of the court ordered the jury box of the county to be brought into open court, and that he drew the names of the special jurors from the jury box in open court. There is no requirement in the present jury law that the jury box shall be "shaken," or that the names be "publicly" drawn, but that they be drawn in open court. This the judgment entry shows to have been done, and we think it affirmatively appears that the special jurors were drawn as required by law. — Acts 1909, p. 305 et seq. But, however this may be, the defect of which the defendant complains is one which may be waived by the defendant failing to interpose timely and appropriate objection (Waldrop v.State, supra; Moton v. State,
(4-6) The defendant, in requesting certain written charges, proceeded on the theory that the evidence without conflict showed that the defendant was within the curtilage of his place of business, and therefore under no duty to retreat. These charges *192
assume the existence or nonexistence of a fact, and the trial court cannot be put in error for refusing an instruction which assumes the existence of a fact, even though the evidence is not in dispute. — Campbell v. State,
"When a question of fact is involved, dependent on oral testimony, the credibility of the evidence must be referred to the jury; and a charge assuming the credibility of the testimony, is erroneous, though it is clear and undisputed." — Davidson v. State,
Likewise it is held that trial courts cannot be required to give charges that there is, or is not, evidence of particular facts. — Troup v. State,
(7) Of the written charges requested by the defendant, charges numbered 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 are disposed of by what has been said. Charges 2 and 3, beside being instructions as to there being no evidence of a particular fact, which the court was under no duty to give, invade the province of the jury. The witness Pierce Huguley, a brother of the defendant, testified that the defendant was the first to use profane or threatening language in the conversation between the deceased and defendant which led to the difficulty. Refused charge No. 4 is substantially covered by charge No. 8 given at the request of the defendant.
The rulings on the evidence to which exceptions were reserved are not insisted upon in brief of defendant's counsel as showing reversible error. We have examined these rulings and the entire record, and find no error requiring reversal of the case.
Affirmed. *194