73 So. 139 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1916
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] Jesse Palmer Was convicted of manslaughter in the first degree and he appeals. Affirmed.
(Ed. Note — This cause was reviewed by the Supreme Court on certiorari, and writ denied. See Palmer v. State,
(4) When jointly indicted with another or others, the right of a defendant to avail himself of the benefits of the statute to have a several trial, while a clear legal right if timely claimed, is a part of the preliminary proceeding not necessary to be affirmatively shown where, as here, no question was raised, objection made, or exception reserved questioning this preliminary step in the prosecution. See Paris v. State.
Cases are to be considered on the record before the court in that case, and any deficiency cannot be supplemented by reference to the record in any other case; but we do not think it out of place, in connection with what we have said as to a severance, and for the purpose of calling attention to the statement of facts (which are in the main similar to those in the record in this case) contained in the report of the case, to refer to the case heretofore before this court, of this defendant's codefendant, Rudolph Jones, alias, etc. SeeJones v. State,
The rulings of the trial court on the evidence that are insisted. upon as showing error were in most every instance passed upon in the case of Rudolph Jones v. State, supra; and, while we have again carefully considered them, we do not think it necessary to again enter upon a detailed discussion of these rulings, as, after again considering them, we adhere to what was there said, and think the discussion in that case sufficient.
The presence of the defendant at the time the witness Snellgrove testified to seeing the deceased with his pocketbook and the remarks made by him as to its contents is sufficiently shown by the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions. In addition to the authorities cited in support of this proposition in Jones' Case, see 21 Cyc. 919; Byers v. State,
(5-7) Statements of the accused to a witness showing that he contemplated flight were competent in connection with proof of his flight in consummation of his expressed intention. Inculpatory statements and the conduct of the defendant tending to show flight as a consciousness of guilt, though weak and inconclusive in themselves, are admissible. The weight is a question for the jury. — Montgomery v. State,
(8) The court properly refused to allow the defendant to show by the witness Jeff Snellgrove that the deceased, while at his house on the night he disappeared, offered to sell liquor to the witness. This evidence had no reasonable or legitimate tendency to prove any issue involved in the charge against the defendant.
In addition to what was said in the Jones Case as to the questions asked the witness Moore, and the evidence elicited thereto on cross-examination not being reversible error, seeBraham v. State,
Other rulings on the evidence not passed on in the Jones Case are manifestly correct, and do not, we think, require discussion. *266
(9) The written charge refused to defendant (marked A) is substantially covered by given charges 1, 5, and 6, and by that part of the court's oral charge embraced in the last paragraph.
We find no reversible error, and the judgment of conviction appealed from must be affirmed.
Affirmed.