Nelson v. State

65 So. 844 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914

WALKER, P. J.

On the cross-examination of one of the witnesses for the state he was asked if he remembered the time he stole the defendant’s watch, and the defendant got after him and made him bring it back. It was not error to sustain the state’s objection to this question. A witness cannot be discredited or impeached by proof, elicited on cross-examination or otherwise, of specific acts of delinquency unconnected with any fact in issue in the case. — Crawford v. State, 112 Ala. 1, 19, 21 South. 214; McQueen v. State, 108 Ala. 54, 18 South. 843; Lowery v. State, 98 Ala. 45, 13 South. 498; Morgan v. State, 88 Ala. 223, 6 South. 761. There was no suggestion in the question that the witness had been convicted of the offense inquired about. The defendant was not entitled to prosecute such a collateral inquiry.

The evidence against the defendant was the testimony of several witnesses to the effect that they saw part of a pistol protruding from one of his hip pockets while he was in his shirt sleeves walking about the station grounds at Shelby Springs. The defendant was entitled, to rebut this evidence by testimony tending to prove that he went from the station grounds to another place without making any change in his clothing, or in what he had on or about his person, and.that there was no pistol on his person when he was seen at the latter place, It was for the jury to pass upon the credibility of the evidence of the conditions being the sam'e -at the two places.

*223On the examination of the defendant, testifying as a witness in his own behalf, he was asked questions as to the state of feeling existing between him and two witnesses who had testified for the state prior to and at the time the prosecution was instituted by one of those witnesses, his counsel stating, when, the first of the questions was objected to, that he expected the answer to the question to show that a bad state of feeling existed between the defendant and the witnesses mentioned. Proper evidence of hostile bias of an opposing witness should not be excluded. Enmity, or ill feeling between parties, is a fact to which a witness may testify if he knows it. — Holmes v. State, 100 Ala. 80, 14 South. 864; Polk v. State, 62 Ala. 237; Lodge v. State, 122 Ala. 97, 26 South. 210, 82 Am. St. Rep. 23. The effect of the killings of the court in sustaining objections to several questions asked in this connection was improperly to deprive the defendant of the opportunity of adducing evidence having a tendency to prove that witnesses who testified aganist him were influenced by a hostile bias by which the credibility of their testimony might be affected.

It is not deemed necessary for the purposes of another trial to mention other questions presented for review.

Reversed and remanded.

midpage