The appellant was charged by indictment in the Circuit Court of Coahoma County with the crime of armed robbery. His trial resulted in his conviction and he was sentenced to serve a term of eight years in the State penitentiary. He appeals from the judgment of conviction.
The State’s case rests wholly upon the testimony of G. C. Conklin, the victim of the alleged robbery, to establish the identity of the appellant as the person who committed the crime charged. The substance of this witness ’ testimony is as follows:
Conklin lived in a trailer at Hillhouse in Coahoma County. The trailer was parked, about six feet from Jackson’s Store. On the evening of December 14, 1955, Conklin left Jackson’s Store at about 6:20 o’clock and went to his trailer. After entering his trailer, he removed his shoes and put on his slippers and turned on his radio and laid down on his bunk. A short time there
The appellant’s defense was an alibi. To sustain this defense, he introduced as witnesses his wife, Mrs. Norma Newton, and his brother-in-law, Belmont McClenic, and six others who were wholly unrelated to him and apparently wholly disinterested. One of these witnesses was an employee of Baxter Laboratories, located near Cleveland, Mississippi. Another was a dragline operator. Another was a tractor dealer in Clarksdale. Another was the son of a Judge of the General Sessions Court in Memphis who traveled in Mississippi for the Ford Tractor-Dearborn Motor Credit Corporation. The testimony of all of these witnesses showed that at the time of the alleged robbery the appellant was in Cleveland or in the immediate vicinity of Cleveland. The undisputed evidence shows that traveling from Conklin’s trailer in Hillhouse to the center of Cleveland, proceeding by the longer route in an automobile at 70 miles per hour, would require 44% minutes, and by the shorter route, would require 36 minutes. It is inescapable that if the testimony of these unrelated and wholly disinterested witnesses is true, the appellant could not have been at the scene of the crime at the time it is alleged to have been committed.
The appellant assigns as error the action of the trial court in refusing the following instruction:
“The Court instructs the jury for the defendant, Jack Newton, that it is only necessary that the evidence of the alibi should raise a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury, and it is not required that the alibi be conclusively established, but on the contrary, the State must prove that the alibi is untrue. ’ ’
It will be obsreved that this instruction placed upon the State the burden of proving that the alibi was
“When the State arraigns a citizen upon an indictment, it assumes the burden of proving his guilt to the satisfaction of the jury, to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt. When it has exhausted its testimony, or so much thereof as it deems necessary, it rests its case, and the prisoner enters upon his defense. The burden resting upon him — if we admit that the burden of proof ever devolves upon him — fails far short of that imposed upon the State. He has only to raise in the minds of the jury a reasonable doubt of his guilt, springing out of all the evidence in the case; and whether he contents himself with rebutting the case made by the State, with all the legal inferences and presumptions deducible therefrom, or adopts what is called an affirmative defense, by undertaking to show exculpatory facts wholly disconnected from the proof made by the State, he is alike entitled to his acquittal when he has succeeded in raising this doubt.”
In view of what we have said, we are of the opinion that the trial court was correct in refusing the aforesaid requested instruction.
“The Court charges the jury for the defendant, Jack Newton, that an alibi is a legal and proper defense in law, and that the defendant is not required to establish the truth of his alibi to your satisfaction, hut that the evidence in support of the alibi need only exclude the possibility of the defendant’s presence at the time and place of the cirme, and if upon consideration of the whole evidence you think there is a probability that the defendant was not at the scene of the crime, then it is your sworn duty to find the defendant not guilty. ’ ’
The court modified said instruction by striking out the words “there is a probability”, and offered to give the instruction as modified. The appellant declined to accept the instruction in its modified form and excepted thereto and declined to read the instruction to the jury. We think the court was in error in striking-out the quoted portion of the instruction. The appellant was entitled to have the jury instructed that if under the evidence there was a probability of his innocence he should be acquitted. Nelms v. State,
We think that the appellant, in the light of the testimony, was entitled to have the jury instructed that if there was a probability of his innocence the jury should acquit him. The record discloses that the jury deliberated a little more than five hours before returning a verdict of guilty. It is conceivable to us that such an instruction might have entirely changed the verdict of the jury in this case. We are accordingly of the opinion that in view of the nature of the testimony for the State on the one
The instruction last above discussed uses the language, “that the evidence in support of the alibi need only exclude the possibility of the defendant’s presence at the time and place of the crime.” We think this language is inaccurate, and we deem it appropriate to point out that if this same instruction is requested on another trial, the language just quoted should be changed so as to direct the jury that the evidence in support of the alibi need only raise in the minds of the jury a reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s presence at the time and place of the crime.
Reversed and remanded.
