389 So. 2d 948 | Ala. | 1980
Petitioner was convicted in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County on September 19, 1978, of the offense of robbery and was sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment. On appeal, the Court of Criminal Appeals,
The Issue: Did the Court of Criminal Appeals err in not reversing the conviction when the trial Court permitted a rebuttal witness to testify as to statements attributed to the Defendant, when the Defendant, as a witness, had not been asked if he had made such declarations? We hold that it was error to affirm the conviction. Thus, we reverse and remand to the Court of Criminal Appeals.
The well-settled rule here applicable is stated in Edwards v.State,
The Court of Criminal Appeals accepts the Edwards principle as the premise for its consideration; but it invokes the equally well-settled exception grounded in Carlile v. State,
Our examination of the record on appeal (for the sake of clarity and as aided by counsel's use of Rule 39 (k)) discloses that the appellate Court's misapplication of the Truex exception is the result of its error in confusing a three-page "State's Proposed Exhibit" (which, in fact, was never admitted) as pages 2, 3, and 4 of Defendant's Exhibit No. 1 (which, in fact, contained only one page).
Once this inadvertence is corrected, it is clear that the trial Court erred in not sustaining the Defendant's objection, on lack of proper predicate grounds, to the State's offer to impeach the Defendant under the instant circumstances. The mere testimony of Defendant that he had made no statement to anyone concerning his whereabouts on the date in question or that he was in any other city on that date falls short of the requisite predicate for impeachment by a prior inconsistent statement. See Zellers v. State,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
All the Justices concur, except for BLOODWORTH, J., not sitting. *950