93 So. 822 | Ala. | 1922
The defendant (appellant) was convicted of the robbery of John R. Martin, at the time a deputy sheriff in Hale county. A pistol was the property averred to have been taken. The officer had gone to the dwelling of the defendant to arrest him on a warrant from another county. Because the evidence for the prosecution failed to disclose any right in the officer to arrest defendant on a warrant from another county, the court, on motion of defendant, excluded all the evidence relating to the warrant, and affirmatively instructed the jury not to consider any evidence in respect of the warrant, thereby rendering innocuous previously admitted testimony in reference to the warrant. The absence of any authority in Martin to arrest defendant left Martin in the attitude of an unjustified assailant of defendant. The court so advised the jury, upon defendant's request.
An essential factor in robbery is that the taking should, at the time of manucaption, have been with a larcenous intent. Thomas v. State,
There was no prejudicial error in refusing *67 defendant's requests for instruction. The law of the case was adequately given in the oral charge and in special charges. The motion for new trial was not erroneously overruled. The only grounds of the motion were that the verdict was contrary to the law or the evidence. The evidence was sufficient to justify the jury in finding the verdict rendered.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.