1. The officers testified that in obtaining the defendant’s statements they questioned the defendant around midnight for about an hour and a half. Special grounds 2 and 3, contending that because of this questioning the statements were not freely and voluntarily made, are without merit.
Wilburn v. State,
2. In support of the general grounds and some of the special grounds the defendant argues that the circumstantial evidence does not sufficiently corroborate the accomplice’s testimony to support a conviction.
It is not required that evidence in corroboration of an accomplice’s testimony “shall of itself be sufficient to warrant a verdict. . . Slight evidence from an extraneous source identifying the accused as a participator in the criminal act will be sufficient corroboration of the accomplice to support a verdict. . . . The sufficiency of the corroboration ... to produce conviction of the defendant’s guilt is peculiarly a matter for the jury to determine.”
Hargrove v. State,
In this case the testimony of the accomplice, the defendant’s voluntary statement, and the evidence, summarized above, of circumstances that tended to show that the accused participated in the commission of the crime, sufficiently supported the conviction.
Worley v. State,
The trial court did not err in overruling the general grounds and special grounds 1, 4, 5 and 7.
3. On cross examination the solicitor asked one of the defendant’s witnesses, who was a farmer, if he remembered making time on the chain gang, if he remembered making any liquor, and if he remembered being in the business of making liquor. *85 Over the defendant’s objections, the court permitted the witness to answer, “Yes, I have made some liquor in my life.” The defendant contends that this questioning was an improper effort to impeach the witness by showing his criminal conduct without introducing the record of his conviction as the law requires. At the trial the solicitor argued that he was asking the questions for the purpose of testing the witness’ memory.
Cross examination to test a witness’ capacity to remember is a recognized method of showing the weight of his testimony. Ill Wigmore, Evidence 635, § 995. When a witness’ powers of recollection are in question, the opposing party is entitled on cross examination to bring out such circumstances as will exhibit the untrustworthiness of the witness' recollection, and the general principles of impeachment control this process. Ill Wig-more, Evidence 64, § 730. Impeachment, as distinct from cross examination of a party to show his bias, prejudice, or friendship for the party for whom he testifies, is governed by its own rules of evidence.
A witness cannot be impeached nor his testimony discredited by proof that he was convicted for the offense of selling intoxicating liquor, as this is not an offense involving moral turpitude.
Edenfield v. State,
The holding of this court in
Mills v. State,
The questioning complained of was obviously an attempt, under the guise of testing the witness’ memory, to discredit him by testimony inadmissible for the purpose of impeachment. The law does not condone an indirect attack on a witness’ character by evidence that would not be permitted in a direct attack on it.
The trial court erred in overruling special ground 6.
Judgment reversed.
