109 Ala. 2 | Ala. | 1895
The issue in this' case was whether the defendant, within a year before indictment, played at a game with cards or dice, or some device or substitute for cards or dice, at a place within the statute, aud bet or hazarded money or bans notes, or other thing of value, at said game. If the house of the witness Dock Sailing was such a place, it was wholly irrelevant to this issue whether the defendant and others played there at his, Sailing’s, invitation, or against his objection and protest. This witness having testified without objection on the part of defendant that the latter and others named played cards, etc., without his consent and against his objection, several times during the late winter and early spring of 1895, the court, against defendant’s objection, allowed the State to further show, for the purpose, we suppose, of lending probabillity to his irrelevent testimony as to the playing being against his objection, that he, the witness, was at that time “an object of charity, and lived on what his little girl could obtain by begging of the white folks, and that he was then flat of
The two witnesses for the State testified as to the playing and betting at cards, etc., charged in the indictment, that “they saw the defendant play at'a game of cards at their house in Huntsville, Alabama, and that Henry Smith, Ed. Smith, the defendant, &c., &c., were present, that the defendant bet money on said game, and that the defendant and said other parties played at witnesses’ said house at various times between the 25th of February and the last of March, 1895, and bet on said game.” Upon this the defendant, both at the close of the State’s testimony, and when all the evidence was in, moved the court to require the solicitor to elect which of the several acts of gaming deposed to by the witnesses he would prosecute for. The court erred in denying this motion. — Smith v. State, 52 Ala. 384; Peacher v. State, 61 Ala. 22; Sullivan v. State, 68 Ala. 525; Black v. State, 83 Ala. 81.
A great many charges were refused to the defendant, but they are not incorporated in the bill of exceptions, and the .action of the court in refusing them cannot be reviewed by this conrt. It is quite an error to suppose, as seems to have been the case here, that the indorsement “given” or “refused,” with signature of the trial judge, on charges requested, makes them a part of the record for this court. They can be presented here only by incorporation in the bill of exceptions.
Probably all of the remarks and statements of the solicitor which are set out in the bill of exceptions were impi’oper, and should not have been made. But it is not within the province of an appellate court to revise the conduct of counsel in the court below ; it is the action of the trial court in respect of such conduct, upon seasonable and proper invocation, that is to be reviewei. In nearly all the instances in which the propriety oí solicitor’s remarks was attempted to be challenged by the defendant, the bill of exceptions shows merely that the defendant objected and excepted to remarks of the solicitor. This presents nothing for our consideration. The objection should have been addressed to the presiding
The question as to the assessment of the fine by the court, instead of the jury, need not arise on another trial.
Reversed and remanded.