117 Ala. 69 | Ala. | 1897
The defendánt was tried and convicted of the offense of murder. During the trial, several exceptions were reserved to the rulings of the court, both as to the admission of evidence, and instructions to the jury. At the request of the defendant, the judge charged the jury in writing as provided in section 3327 of the Code of 1896. This written charge by the judge is very lengthy, covering almost every phase of the law of homicide and as applicable to the facts. It may be that we cannot give our unqualified approval of every proposition contained in the charge ; but under the view wb take of the principle of practice applicable, the case must be reversed, without reference to the correctness of those portions to which exceptions were reserved. It is well settled, that the court is not required to repeat charges already given. (See the cases cited under section 3328 of the Code of 1896.) Many of the charges refused some of which at least asserted correct propositions of law, were indorsed “Refused because already given,” The question presented is, whether the rule,
It was competent for the witness to state, that the cartridges in the pistol not exploded, looked as if they had been recently snapped. He might have been cross-examined as to the facts.
It was not competent for the witness to testify that in his opinion a rock the size of that thrown by deceased was calculated to produce death or great bodily harm, at the distance from which it was thrown. This character of evidence is not expert evidence, and the witness was not an expert, and was no more competent to form a conclusion than the members of the jury. The admission of such testimony would have amounted to a mere substitution of his conclusion for the conclusion of the jury.
There is no merit in the exceptions reserved upon questions of evidence.
Reversed and remanded.