109 So. 528 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1926
According to the testimony of the state's witnesses, defendant and two others were found at a still preparing to manufacture whisky. The count charging defendant with manufacturing whisky was nol prossed, and the trial proceeded upon the second count in the indictment charging defendant with unlawfully possessing a still, etc. Under the evidence a jury question was presented, and therefore the general charge, as requested by defendant, was properly refused. The oral charge of the court, together with the written charges given at the request of defendant, covered every phase of the law governing this case and amply covered the propositions of law, when correctly stated, in the refused charges requested by defendant.
On cross-examination of John Higgins, a witness for defendant, the solicitor was permitted, over the objections and exceptions of defendant, to ask the witness if he had not faked sickness at a prior term of the court in order to keep from being brought to trial on a charge of possessing this same still at the same time and place. This line of questioning was persisted in, but all of the answers were favorable to defendant.
The rulings of the court on these questions therefore are not such as would entitle the defendant to complain. Moreover, having failed to get an answer favorable to the state, the solicitor withdrew the questions.
On the cross-examination of defendant while he was being examined as a witness, the solicitor was permitted to prove, over proper objection and exception of defendant, that, at a different time and place and in no way connected with the charge in this indictment, the defendant had been convicted and paid a fine for being in possession of some 100 gallons of whisky. Furthermore, in his argument to the jury the solicitor was permitted, over the timely objection and exceptions of defendant, to comment on this fact, the only effect of which was to prejudice the jury against the defendant. Defendants in all kinds and characters of criminal cases are entitled to be tried on legal evidence and free from prejudice superinduced by illegal testimony or appeals of prosecuting officers, not based upon legal evidence. The error is patent, and the injury is apparent. Cobb v. State,
The state was permitted to prove, over the objection and motion to exclude, that when the still was raided the defendant ran and was pursued by one of the officers, caught, and that the officer took a pistol off of defendant's person. If the motion had been confined to the fact that the officer took a pistol off of the person of defendant, such motion would probably have been granted. Seigler v. State,
The excerpts from the solicitor's argument are hardly sufficient upon which to base a ruling. Decisions of this court are numerous declaring the rule as applicable to argument of counsel. They must not state as facts something not in the record and applicable to the cause then being tried. A violation of this rule constitutes error usually to a reversal. The leading case in this state is Cross v. State,
When the conduct of the solicitor during *497
the trial is such as that, taking into consideration the power and dignity of his office, the jury has probably been influenced against the defendant by reason of such illegal acts to such an extent that the verdict is the result, in some degree, of such conduct, the court should on proper motion set aside the verdict and grant a new trial. But this is primarily a question for the trial court. Campbell v. State,
For the error pointed out this judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.