66 So. 25 | Ala. | 1914
This is the fifth appeal in this case. After a thorough consideration of the evidence, this court, on the first appeal, declared that the evidence in the case fairly and reasonably permitted inferences favorable to the guilt of the defendant, and for that reason that the trial court was not authorized, under the law, to give to the jury affirmative instructions on behalf of the defendant. The records which have, on the various appeals, been brought to this court have, perhaps, given to this court a peculiarly familiar acquaintance with each piece of the testimony in the case which reasonably permits of inferences favorable to the guilt •of the defendant, and have also given to the court a peculiar and intimate acquaintance with each question of law which can under the evidence, in any way, be invoked on behalf of the defendant.
The defendant in this case has again by the verdict of a jury been adjudged guilty of murder in the first degree, and has again been sentenced to death. Out of respect to our duty under the law, we have, with a full knowledge of the gravity of the situation, again carefully examined all the evidence in this case, and, after
2. There is nothing in the contention of defendant that witnesses should not have been allowed to testify to the finding of sorghum seed and peas under a pile of lumber which was across a railroad from the defendant’s house and several hundred yards from his house. The opinion rendered on the second appeal indicates that this lumber was in the defendant’s back yard. Pope v. State, 174 Ala. 63, 57 South. 245.
The record on this appeal shows that the lumber was not in the defendant’s back yard, but that it was located as above stated and on lands not belonging to the defendant. The record on this appeal, however, shows that the defendant was near this pile of lumber at the time of his arrest; that the lumber belonged to the defendant; and that the lumber was, and had been for a considerable period., kept by the defendant at the place where it was piled with the consent, express or implied, of the owner of the lands upon which it was piled.
The deceased was beaten to death by blows upon the head, and some of the blunt instruments used in the perpetration of the murder had blood, human cuticle, and hair upon them. As bearing upon the question as to whether the defendant ivas guilty of the murder, it was therefore competent for the state to show that, on the day after the homicide, a pair of shoes, with evidences of blood and flesh upon them (shoes which some of the evidence tended to show were shoes of the defendant), were found secreted under a house upon the defendant’s premises, and that, even six weeks afterwards, sorghum seed and peas in a sprouting condition (as sorghum seed and peas similar to those found under the lumber pile were stolen from the ginliouse when it was burglarized) were found secreted under the lumber pile.
Whenever evidence is relevant, no matter how inconclusive it may be, a trial court cannot be put in error for admitting it.—Pope v. State, 174 Ala. 63, 57 South. 245.
3. It seems from the record now before us that Mc-Clurkin, the deceased, owned a water mill which was
While, on the premises on Monday afternoon, the defendant was informed that the negro boy who slept in the mill had killed a rattlesnake. Against the objection of the defendant, the state was permitted to prove that, while the defendant was at or near the mill on Monday afternoon, he told the boy wlm slept in the mill that he “ought not to sleep in the millhouse,” saying, at the same time, that a “snake might bite him in the mill-house.” This testimony, upon all the previous appeals in this case, has been held to be relevant. If, when the defendant had the conversation with the boy who slept in the mill, he intended to burglarize the ginhouse, it is not unnatural that he would have preferred, that, when the burglary was committed, no one should be in the mill. It may be that on the previous appeals the records may not have disclosed that the mill and the gin were not in the same building, but, if so, that fact cannot affect the relevancy of the evidence, although it may affect its probative force. The man who burglarized the gin-house did so for the purpose of stealing sorghum seed and cotton seed therefrom. He went there with a wagon
The fact- that McClurkin and the members of his household slept in a residence which was in hearing distance of the ginhouse does not affect the relevancy of the above testimony. . With no one in the mill, chances of discovery of the contemplated burglary, if one was contemplated, were less than if both the mill and the residence were occupied by human beings. Where evidence is pertinent, although it may be, considered alone, weak and inconclusive, it is competent.—Alsabrooks, et al. v. State, 52 Ala. 24.
4. During the progress of the trial, certain exceptions were reserved by the defendant to portions of the testimony of a witness Nett Body.
There are, as has been said by this court in its previous discussions of this case, two theories relative to this murder. One theory is that John Body committed the
It is true that Nett Body is John Body’s mother. It is also true that, when she first testified in the case, John Body was then in jail charged with McClurkin’s murder. These facts affect, not the relevancy, but only the value, of Nett Body’s testimony.
5. We have above considered all the questions which counsel for the defendant have, in their brief, called to our attention. A careful examination of the record indicates that they have in their briefs directed our attention to every question presented by the record which calls for discussion at our hands. The record fails to show reversible error, and as this case presented, under
Affirmed.