125 So. 688 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1930
From a judgment of conviction for manslaughter in the first degree this appeal was taken.
This court has given attentive and careful consideration to the matters contained in this record. We find no evidence showing or tending to show that this appellant contributed in any manner to the bringing on of the difficulty with Oliver which resulted in the death of Oliver, the deceased named in the indictment. To the contrary, we think it clearly appears that Oliver and one Johnson, and possibly others, were the aggressors throughout, and that the fatal difficulty resulted solely from the activities of these parties. That Oliver met his death as a result of knife wounds inflicted upon him by appellant is without dispute, but under the law this fact is by no means conclusive of the guilt of the accused, for every killing of a human being by another is not necessarily unlawful. The law recognizes the right of a person to take the life of another in order to save his own life, provided none of its provisions have been transgressed, and that the act is done in self-defense. Barnett v. state,
In the Barnett Case this court said: "While the divine law says, 'Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself' [it also says, 'Thou shalt not kill'], neither the divine law nor the law of man requires one to love his neighbor better than himself. This, coupled with the natural instinct, that of self-preservation, the first law of nature," etc. In Pilcher v. State,
The statement attributed to the defendant, by the testimony of state witness Jasperson, to wit, "I'll cut the son of a bitch," if made, was not of the res gestæ. Cox v. State,
In Childs v. State,
In Jordan v. State,
In Carlisle v. Hunley,
In Jackson v. State,
In Green v. State,
Davis v. State,
In Booth v. State,
Much perplexity has been experienced by the courts in laying down satisfactory rules, where illegal evidence calculated to prejudice the defendant has been admitted and subsequently excluded. We think, however, and the general rule seems to be, that direct reversible error in this connection will not prevail, where the trial court has taken proper means to correct the error by direct, specific, and unequivocal instructions to the jury to disregard the illegal proof. But we do think, and so hold, that matters of this nature should be seriously and carefully considered upon motion for a new trial, to the end that no conviction should be allowed to stand, unless it clearly appears that the accused has, in all things, received the fair and impartial trial contemplated by law and to which in every instance he is entitled.
It is clearly deducible, from the undisputed evidence in this record, that state witness Johnson had some words with defendant in the late afternoon of the night of the killing, and that Johnson, with Oliver, the deceased, and possibly others, went to the commissary where the difficulty occurred in search of the defendant. And it was the insistence of defendant that the parties mentioned were after defendant for the purpose of raising the difficulty. In this connection the defendant on cross-examination asked the star witness, Johnson, who had testified he went there with Oliver to see defendant, after he (witness) had told Oliver of the occurrence with defendant in the afternoon, and Oliver told witness to go in the store (where defendant was) and tell him that he wanted to see him: "Q. Who did you leave Mr. Oliver with when you went in the store?" The court sustained objection to the question. This was error. The transaction and circumstances leading up to the difficulty were material matters, and under the defendant's insistences and contentions this evidence was clearly admissible and defendant should have been allowed to put this matter before the jury for their consideration in connection with all the other facts and circumstances in the case. By this ruling the right of full cross-examination of the witness was unduly abridged.
Witness McCants testified he got to the place of the difficulty that night just as the trouble came up, that the defendant came out of the store when he first saw him, and that he and defendant had a conversation there at that time, and Oliver and Johnson came up there at that time. The court would not let witness relate the conversation, although the other parties were present and it was an instant only before the difficulty was started by Oliver with defendant. The alleged conversation related to the difficulty and was of the res gestæ, and, this being true, what was said and done there at the time relating to the difficulty was admissible and should have been admitted.
Upon a consideration of the whole case, as shown by this record, we are of the opinion that defendant's motion for a new trial should have been granted, and it was error to refuse same.
Reversed and remanded.