65 So. 732 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
The addition of “Junior,” or its abbreviation, to a name is a mere matter of description, and is no part of the name. It is generally used to distinguish between father and son of the same name who reside in the same community. — 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 1036.
It may be that, where there are two persons of the same name in the same place — as father and son or uncle and nepheAv — where the name is written without the addition of either “Junior” or “Senior,” as here, the senior is presumed to have been intended; yet such a presumption may be rebutted, and is, as seen, successfully rebutted in this case.
The other grounds of the motion to quash the venire are equally untenable; but, as appellant’s counsel do not
Nor was there error on the part of the court in refusing to permit the defendant to show that, after the difficulty, he sent for a doctor to attend deceased. It does not appear that this act was a part of the res gestae.— Dick v. State, 87 Ala. 61, 6 South. 395; Lundsford v. State, 2 Ala. App. 41, 56 South. 89.
The deceased was a cropper on the plantation of the defendant, and the difficulty occurred in the front yard of the tenant house occupied by deceased, in the presence of the wife of deceased, who, as a witness for the state, described the occurrence and detailed the conversation which then took place between the parties leading up to the difficulty. From her statement it appears, among other things, that defendant came down to the house and requested deceased to join him in getting from their mutual patch some corn and in taking it to mill. The latter said “No,” and asked his wife, then present, if they had enough meal to do for the week. She testified, without objection, that she replied in effect that they did, but that all they had to live on was “dry bread, and dry bread alone.” One word followed another between the parties, until, according to the state’s evidence, the defendant drew a pistol and deliberately killed deceased, while, according to the defendant’s evidence, he shot only in self-defense and to save himself from a blow from an axe in the hands of deceased, who first assaulted defendant by picking up the axe and advancing on him. Defendant offered to prove by his witness Watts, who was a merchant, that he (defendant) had given deceased
One of defendant’s character witnesses, after testifying to defendant’s good character, was asked by the state
General character is the reputation one has made in the community in which be lives, the resultant of bis general yralk and conversation, and it cannot be shown by proof of particular acts of good or bad- conduct, but only by proof of bis general reputation; that is, what his neighbors say about him, or bow be is generally accepted and received or regarded by them.
A witness who, at the instance of either party, testifies to such reputation may however, on cross-examination by the other, be asked as to reports and rumors of particular acts bearing on such reputation — not for the purpose of proving that such reports or rumors are true, but merely of proving that the witness has beard them and thus to test the knowledge and soundness of bis opinion as to the general character to which be has testified and to ascertain the data on which that opinion is based. The truth or falsity of such rumors or reports is entirely immaterial to the issue. — Moulton v. State, 88 Ala. 118, 6 South. 758, 6 L. R. A. 301; 1 Mayf. Dig. 154. Being so, it follows that it is likewise immaterial whether the conduct that is the subject of such rumor or report was justified or not.
Besides, the answer of the witness here to the question of the solicitor having gone beyond a response to such inquiry and having improperly stated a fact — that is, that the witness knew of a little lawsuit between defendant and another — the defendant’s remedy, if be deemed such statement deleterious, was to have it excluded on
The court also properly refused to allow the defendant’s witness Cappelle to give his conclusion that the pasteboard he saw with holes in it in deceased’s yard was a knuck pattern. It was for the jury to say, from all the facts and circumstances given, whether or not it was a knuck pattern.
The fatal difficulty occurred on Saturday morning, and the state proved that on Friday evening, the evening of the day before the difficulty the next morning, the defendant borrowed from a neighbor the pistol with which he killed the deceased. This evidence, without more, afforded basis for an inference that the defendant went to the house of deceased, where the fatal difficulty occurred, for the purpose of killing him. In order to rebut this inference and to show that only a motive of self-protection prompted him in borrowing and carrying the pistol, the defendant proved that before he borrowed it he had had several controversies with deceased during the course of the year about the crop, the last one, the
It was entirely competent for the defendant to show either threats or ill feeling on the part of the deceased.— Rutledge v. State, 88 Ala. 85, 7 South. 335; Gafford v. State, 122 Ala. 53, 25 South. 10. The object of the proof of such here being to show, as contended by defendant, not an absolute threat, which would lead defendant to expect serious and certain trouble when ever he saw deceased, and which would forbid that he go to deceased’s house on any mission, but only such general animus and contrary disposition on the part of deceased, with respect to their mutual farming operations, as to indicate that it was not certain, but likely, that such animus might at some time, in the course of their dealings, break out into violence, and as consequently to suggest to defendant, who, by reason of these mutual
Its probative force, even if the declarations had been admitted in evidence as a part of the res gestas of the threat, was still a qustion for the jury and depended, even if they believed it to have been made, upon whether they further believed it expressed defendant’s honest purpose when made or was made merely as a blind to shadow his contrary intentions, and upon whether, even
It is not contended that any of the written charges given at the request of the solicitor were bad, except charge No. 5. With respect to this it may be said, without the necessity of further consideration, that the action of the court in giving the charge will- not be reviewed, for reasons as pointed out in the following cases: Evans v. State, 109 Ala. 11, 19 South. 535; Mitchell v. State, 133 Ala. 65, 32 South. 132.
Charge 13 requested by defendant was properly refused, because, if for no other reason, it ignored'the question of defendant’s imminent peril at the time of firing the fatal shot. — Richardson v. State, 133 Ala. 78, 32 South. 249; Abernathy v. State, 129 Ala. 85, 29 South. 844.
Charge X was also properly refused. — 5 Mayf. Dig. 128, §§ 13, 15. It was the equivalent of an assertion that when a witness has been contradicted in a material particular, the jury are authorized to disregard his entire testimony, and this notwithstanding they may not have
Charge HI, while abstractly stating a correct proposition of law, was properly refused, because, in the form requested, it was well calculated to create in the minds of the jury the impression that it was meant to be understood as a direction from the court that the defendant in arming himself did so for the puipose of self-defense, when it was for the jury to say whether he did so for offense or defense.
We are also of opinion that charge Nl, requested by the defendant, Avas properly refused. While it is true that the uncontradicted evidence, both for the" state and for the defendant, showed that the deceased was a cropper working defendant’s land under the latter’s direction and under a contract Avhereby he was to furnish the labor and defendant the land and teams, and while it is consequently true that the defendant had a right to be on the premises and to go even into deceased’s yard, where the difficulty occurred, on any lawful business connected Avith their farming operations, and while it is consequently further true that his mere presence there, without more, would afford no unfavorable inferences against him, yet, there was more in this case, if the state’s evidence be believed, and such in character, when considered in connection with such presence, as Avould make such presence an unfavorable circumstance against defendant. The court cannot be required to disassociate facts and circumstances Avhich are associated in the evidence or to charge that a particular fact standing alone would have no probative force, when, in the evidence, such fact does not stand alone. The charge is abstract, in that it seeks to apply the law to a condition which does not exist in this case. We find nothing in
We have discussed only the points urged in appellant’s brief, but we find no error in any part of the record, and the judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Affirmed.