109 So. 526 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1926
From a judgment of conviction for manslaughter in the first degree, this appeal was taken. We note from the record that this appellant was attended by counsel on the trial of this case in the court below, but no brief has been filed in this court in her behalf. There is a brief filed here in behalf of the state by the Attorney General.
The first question presented for our consideration is that of venue. It is not necessary to allege where the offense was committed, but it must be proved on the trial to have been committed within the jurisdiction of the court in which the indictment is preferred. *495
In this case the state made several attempts to prove the venue, but produced no witness who could, would, or did testify that the offense here complained of was committed within the territorial subdivision of Marshall county, known as the Albertville division of the circuit court of Marshall county, and in said circuit court the indictment in this case was preferred. The bill of exceptions purports to contain all the evidence adduced upon this trial. As stated, proof of venue is not shown. This question is presented in nearly every conceivable form, and failure to prove the venue must of necessity work a reversal of the judgment of conviction. "A conviction in a criminal case can never be had except upon proof of the venue." Bowdon v. State,
There are numerous other questions presented, but all of them need not be discussed. On cross-examination of the defendant, the state propounded to her several questions as to whether or not she, the witness, had had the gonorrhea, etc., and if she had not been treated for that disease, all of which was answered in the negative. This inquiry had no place upon the trial of this case; it did not even tend to shed any light upon the issues involved. It was highly prejudicial to the substantial rights of the defendant and tended to place the witness in an improper light before the jury — a status of an unsavory nature and of contempt. We do not say that this was a deliberate effort upon the part of the state to place the witness in disrepute before the jury, but we do note that the state made no effort to follow up the inquiry. The writer is of the opinion that the numerous exceptions reserved in this connection should be sustained, and that these rulings of the court were prejudicial to the substantial rights of the accused, and also constituted reversible error for the reasons hereinabove stated; but, the majority are of the opinion that, while the rulings complained of were error, such error was rendered harmless by the negative answer of the witness.
There are several statements of the solicitor complained of, and if the questions were properly presented so that we would be authorized to review them, several of the insistences would of necessity be sustained, as practically all of the argument objected to was improper and not within the confines of legitimate argument. Some of the solicitor's argument consisted in a recitation by him of alleged facts and circumstances having occurred on some prior occasion, but wholly foreign to any of the issues or facts of the case on trial. The argument was ill-advised, improper, and should have had no place upon the trial of this case. However, the appellant cannot be given the benefit of these matters, as mere objection to argument avails nothing on appeal, and in the absence of a motion to exclude the argument, an exception is equally abortive. Lambert v. State,
On the motion for a new trial, which is properly presented, the court could have considered the improper and hurtful argument. In this case we are of the opinion the court should have done so, and erred in denying the motion for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.