68 Ala. 492 | Ala. | 1881
1. The indictment conforms substan- . tially to the form prescribed by the Code, and, though omitting allegations deemed material at common law, under a long line of decisions must be deemed sufficient.
2. Tf there be error in the record, of injury to the appellant, it is to be found only in the exceptions reserved to the rulings of the court below in the admission of evidence. The first of these rulings refers to the admission of evidence of threats to kill the deceased, made by the accused at different times, through a period of two years, and some of them not unqualified, but stated conditionally. The force of the threat may affect its weight as evidence, while not rendering it inadmissible. Whatever may be its force, whether absolute or conditional, whether it indicates a purpose only contemplated, or fully matured, it is admissible in evidence, because indica
3. The declaration made by the accused to ^Lucy, but a few weeks before her death, including a threat to kill her, is not a partial or unfinished statement, though it is certain that it must have been preceded, and probably was succeeded, by other conversation which the witness did not hear. In itself, it is an accusation against the deceased of falsehood, and a threat to take her life.
4. The admission of the evidence of the witness Pitts, that, on the Sunday before Lucy’s death, he heard the accused say, “that he didn’t mind killing a negro, if he fooled with him, any more than he would a buck-rabbit,” was erroneous. All evidence ought to be responsive to the issue, and within the issue it is the duty of the court to confine the evidence. Facts and circumstances, which, when proved, can furnish no aid in determining the issue, can shed no light upon the transaction, or matter of inquiry, ought, in criminal cases, ever to be rigorously excluded. Every fact, to which evidence is offered, may, in itself, become the subject of controversy; and,
This declaration of the accused, coming, as mere oral declarations generally come, iu a very questionable shape— an isolated expression, unaccompanied by any evidence of the circumstances under which it was uttered, by the conversation preceding it, by any evidence of the state of mind of the prisoner at the time of its utterance, is incapable of affording any aid or direction in the determination of any fact forming an element of the crime witli which he is accused. It is not an expression of ill-will, or of hate to the deceased, nor a declaration of purpose to do her an injury. If if imports an unfriendly spirit, or a declaration of criminal intention, it is incapable of individualization-it is directed against a race, not a class of people, nor individuals of a class. It may indicate general malignity of heart; but evidence of that should not be received, unless its manifestations formed a part of the res gestes., or were connected with it directly. A party ought not to be convicted of the offense with which he is charged, because he may have manifested a disposition to commit such offense; nor because be may have been, at some former time, guilty of, or even convicted of them ; nor should he be convicted, because he may be of bad character — certainly nob because he may have indulged iu expressions indicative of an evil heart. The admission of this evidence may have prejudiced the minds of the jury against the accused — may have induced them to give to the evidence tending to criminate him a weight which otherwise ought not to have been accorded to it. In itself, it is irrelevant, too far removed from every inquiry involved in the issue before the jury.
5. The confessions of the accused seem to have been vo-1-. untary, not induced by hopes or fears excited by others. That they were made while he was under arrest, or to officers of the law, or even elicited by inquiries addressed to him, did
For the error pointed out, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded. The prisoner will remain in custody until discharged by due course of law.