56 So. 5 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
The defendant was indicted for murder in the second degree, and was tried and convicted of murder in the second degree, and was sentenced to the penitentiary for 10 years.
The evidence for the state tended to show that defendant shot deceased after he reached the gate and was in two or three feet of deceased, and it further tended to show that the homicide was not in self-defense, but constituted murder in the second degree. The evidence for
Undoubtedly, when the deceased, in view of his relations with defendant, went, with his two friends, to the home of defendant with a Winchester rifle and a pistol and called defendant from his house to the gate, he did an act which was calculated to provoke a difficulty, and if the defendant, and not deceased, had been killed as the result of the visit, the deceased could hardly, under the evidence in this case, have invoked the doctrine of self-defense. It is undoubtedly true, also, that defend
It is our understanding of the law that the jury has the right to pass upon the credibility of a witness or the weight to be given his testimony. The jury may accept a part of the testimony of a witness, if they believe it to be true, and reject the other part, if they believe it to be untrue; or they may reject it as a whole, if they disbelieve all of it. Applying this well-known doctrine to the evidence in this case, we are unable to hold that, under the evidence, the defendant was either guilty of murder in the second degree, or that he was innnocent. The jury, and the jury alone, had the right to say how much, if any, of the evidence which was offered on behalf of the state or the defendant they believed, and they therefore had the right, if they believed that each witness testified truthfully only in one part of his testimony and falsely in the other part, to reject, as untrue, a part of the testimony of each witness who testified in the case, and to accept the rest of his testimony
The jury, therefore, had the right in the present case, if, in their judgment, and in their judgment alone, the just and legal grounds for so doing existed, to have rejected that part of the evidence for the state which was most unfavorable to the defendant, and to have rejected as untrue the parts of defendant’s testimony most favorable to himself. This being true, we do not, as above stated, find any substantial reason for holding that, under all the evidence in this case, the jury could not have acquitted the defendant of murder in the second degree, and at the same time not have had sufficient evidence to convict him of manslaughter in the first degree. “In trials for murder, it is the duty of the court to instruct the jury as to all degrees of homicide, unless there is an entire absence of all proof as to the degrees omitted. — ■ 1 Mayfield’s Dig. p. 640.
The case of Compton v. State, 110 Ala. 24, 20 South. 119, is similar, in many respects, and practically identically similar, to the present case on the question under discussion, and in that cause the Supreme Court held that the trial court committed reversible error in failing to charge the jury on the subject of manslaughter in the first degree.
The cases of Gafford v. State, 125 Ala. 1, 28 South. 406, and Rogers v. State, 117 Ala. 9, 22 South. 666, announce principles which are not applicable to the evidence in this case. In each of the above cases, the defendant was out “gunning” for his adversary, and in each case the motive of the defendant was an alleged wrong done by the deceased to a female relative. The
We are therefore of the opinion that the court below, under the facts as shown in the record, committed reversible error in failing to charge the jury on the subject of manslaughter in the first degree, as requested in writing by the defendant.
Reversed and remanded.