85 So. 789 | Ala. | 1920
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *127 The homicide of which the appellant stands convicted occurred on November 11, 1918, on Noble street in the city of Anniston, during the celebration by the people of that city of the signing of the armistice agreement. The deceased, John Baxter, was a son-in-law of the appellant. About two months before the homicide Baxter's wife had separated from him, taking with her their only child, a boy about four years of age, and was then living at her father's home as a member of his family. Mrs. Baxter, some time previous to the homicide, had commenced proceedings against her husband for divorce, which was then pending in the courts; and the evidence offered by the state shows that appellant had been giving her assistance in the prosecution of that suit. About an hour before the killing, the appellant and the members of his family, consisting of his wife, Mrs. Baxter and her child, and appellant's two unmarried daughters, left their home, and had gone upon the streets to engage in the celebration then in progress, and while they were standing on the sidewalk, watching the celebration, the deceased approached the child, either to speak to and caress him, or seize and abduct him.
The state's theory, as developed by the tendencies of the evidence, is that deceased's purpose in approaching the child was to speak to and caress him, and while in the act of doing so, and without other provocation, appellant ordered him to pass on, and immediately fired upon him, inflicting the wounds from which Baxter died a few days thereafter. On the other hand, the defendant's contention, as the evidence offered by him tends to show, is that the purpose of Baxter was to seize and take the child from its mother, and in doing so he violently assaulted her by striking her one or more blows in the face, which rendered her unconscious, and thereupon appellant interposed in defense of his daughter, and as Baxter made a demonstration as if to draw a pistol from his hip pocket to assault appellant, appellant drew his pistol and fired. The appellant also offered evidence to the effect that, when Mrs. Baxter separated from her husband and declared her intention to return to her father's home, Baxter made the threat that if she did he would kill her, the baby, and appellant. Evidence is also offered to the effect that, after the separation, the deceased, on one occasion, had gone to the defendant's house to see his child, and that permission to see it was denied him by defendant's wife.
This statement of the different phases of the evidence is sufficient to show that the question as to who was the aggressor on the occasion of the fatal tragedy was in sharp conflict, and involved the motive or purpose of the deceased in approaching the child. As tending to shed light on this question, the defendant offered as evidence the answer and cross-bill filed by the deceased in the divorce action, in which he charged his wife, Mrs. Baxter, with adultery, and averred that she was an unsuitable person to have the custody of the child, and prayed that its custody be taken from her and committed to him. On the objection of the solicitor, the court refused to admit this evidence.
It is not disputed that the defendant intentionally fired the shot that caused Baxter's death, and if, as the state contends, the defendant shot the deceased because he had stopped to speak to and caress his child, without more, then the defendant is guilty of some offense. On the other hand, if the deceased was attempting to forcibly take the child from its mother, and in doing so violently assaulted her, the defendant was justified in interfering to protect his daughter; and if, in so doing, the deceased, for the purpose of murderously assaulting the defendant, attempted to draw a pistol from his *128 pocket, or if the circumstances surrounding the parties at the time were such as to induce a reasonable man to believe that such was the purpose of the deceased, and the defendant honestly so believed, he had a right to act in defense of himself, if he was free from fault in provoking or bringing on the difficulty. Therefore the purpose of the deceased in approaching the child was a pertinent inquiry that would naturally address itself to the jury in determining who was the aggressor on the occasion of the homicide. What was said in Gafford's Case is pertinent here:
" 'Whatever tends to shed light on the main inquiry, and does not withdraw attention from such main inquiry by obtruding upon the minds of the jury matters which are foreign, or of questionable pertinency, is, as a general rule, admissible evidence.' In view of the conflicting testimony as to which of the two, deceased or the defendant, was the aggressor in the unfortunate tragedy, would the offered testimony shed any light on that question? Could the jury fairly determine that question, without knowledge of facts which might have exerted an influence upon or supplied the motive to one or the other to become the aggressor?" Gafford v. State,
It only requires the exercise of common sense, in the light of our knowledge of human nature, to see that the offered evidence would have enabled the jury, in determining the issues of self-defense, to view the acts of the deceased from the defendant's standpoint. This evidence throws light, not only upon the motive actuating the deceased, but sheds light on and gives character to his conduct on the occasion in question. Gafford v. State, supra; Ezzell v. State,
But it is urged that the answer and cross-bill filed by the deceased is denied admissibility as evidence by the case of Ex parte E. C. Payne Lumber Co.,
In Callan v. McDaniel, supra, the court was dealing with the statements made in a bill in equity filed by the plaintiff, and verified by affidavit, which had been offered as showing admissions against interest; and in the course of the opinion the court said:
"The bill in equity filed by the plaintiff against the defendant, was verified by affidavit. It is true that a bill, ** * not verified, is regarded as containing rather thesuggestions of counsel than the deliberate statements ofplaintiff, and is not, in a collateral suit, admissibleevidence against him of the facts stated in it." [Italics supplied.] 1 Brickell's Dig. 829, § 353.
It will be noted that the italicized utterances are not only dicta, but they do not militate against the admissibility of an unsworn pleading, offered to show the filing of such suit, or the claim asserted therein. In the case of Adams v. McMillan, Ex'r, 7 Port. 73, 85, digested in 1 Brickell's Dig. and cited in Callan v. McDaniel, supra, it was said:
"But we are of opinion that a bill in chancery is not evidence in another suit, to prove the facts contained in it,or evidence for any purpose, except to prove the fact that sucha bill was filed."
In Davidson v. Rothschild,
"When parties allege matters of fact in their pleadings, these pleadings may be offered in evidence against such parties as admissions of fact so alleged. * * * When a statement by a party in a pleading other than in the pending suit is offered in evidence, the statement is admissible on the same principle as oral admissions; hence it is not necessary that the parties should be the same, and the pleadings of a party may be received against him in a subsequent suit, although the parties are different. The weight to be given to such admissions depends upon various circumstances. If the pleading is sworn to, and hence is the deliberate and solemn statement of the party, its admissions may afford evidence against him not easily rebutted. When the allegations are made on information and belief, they are still admissible in evidence, as this fact only detracts from the weight of the testimony. But if the pleadings are not sworn to, and are drawn by counsel, and the allegations have not been expressly directed or approved by the party, they may be *129 of little significance. Indeed, under the former practice it was held that bills in chancery not sworn to were not admissible, except to prove such a fact as their own existence,or the commencement of a suit, or what the facts in issue were. They were rejected as admissions, on the ground that they consisted largely of the suggestions of counsel, so framed as to obtain an answer under oath. And the pleadings in actions at law have also often been rejected as admissions, when not shown to have been approved or directed by the party himself. Many of the cases holding that pleadings were inadmissible as admissions were based on the theory that most of the allegations were merely pleader's matter — fiction stated by counsel and sanctioned by the courts. The whole modern tendency is to reject this view, and to treat pleadings as statements of the real issues in the cause, and hence as admissions of the parties, having weight according to the circumstances of each case. But some of the authorities still hold that if the pleading is not signed by the party there should be some proof that he has authorized it." Jones on Evidence, § 272.
According to Greenleaf on Evidence (1 Greenleaf [16th Ed.] § 186, subd. 3):
"The true rule is that formal allegations are presumed to be made by the attorney on general instructions and without the personal knowledge of the client; but particular and specific allegations of matters of action or defense, which cannot be presumed to have been made under the general authority of the attorney, but under specific instructions to him from the client, are competent evidence against the client."
2 Wigmore on Evidence, § 1066, supports their admissibility, as does 2 Chamberlayne on Evidence, §§ 1248-1250.
The authorities seem to be uniform that the pleadings in an action at law or a suit in equity are always admissible for the purpose of showing the existence of such pleading, the fact that such suit has been filed, and the issues involved, and for the purposes of this case that is all that is necessary. Jones on Evidence, supra; 2 Chamberlayne on Evidence, § 1248.
The evidence offered was admissible to show that the deceased was contending for the custody of the child for reasons which might prompt him to take it by force under such circumstances as existed on the occasion of the homicide in question, and the court erred in sustaining the solicitor's objection to this evidence. Union Refining Co. v. Barton,
The original bill in the divorce proceedings, the filing of which had already been shown by the state, had no such tendency, and the objection to it was properly sustained.
It was not permissible for the witness Elder, from his mere examination of the wounds on the deceased's body, to testify as to the relative position of the parties at the time of the shooting. Rigell v. State,
The court did not err in allowing the solicitor to inquire of Mrs. Richardson and Mrs. Baxter as to whether or not a physician was called to attend Mrs. Baxter on account of the injuries alleged to have been inflicted by the deceased at the time of the killing. The evidence on the question as to whether or not the deceased assaulted Mrs. Baxter was in dispute, and this evidence tended to shed light on this question. Newman v. State,
The statement of the solicitor in argument, "that in the many murder cases that I have tried, I have heard this hip pocket defense come up," was not based on any evidence in the case, was improper, and should have been excluded by the court by positive instructions. The reason for excluding such statements of counsel, and the promptness and positiveness of the instructions to be given to the jury under such circumstances, has been so often stated that we deem it unnecessary to repeat the rule. Cross v. State,
Charges 1 and 8 were properly refused. Moss v. State,
The question of the justification of defendant carrying a concealed pistol was not a pertinent issue in this case, and therefore charges 4, 5, and 6 were abstract.
Charges 9 and 12 pretermit the defendant's freedom from fault. Crawford v. State,
Charges 10 and 13, by the use of the word "attached" for "attacked," were faulty, and therefore properly refused.
Charges 11 and 12 assumed that there was a difficulty between the deceased and his wife, as to which the evidence was in dispute, and these charges were invasive of the province of the jury. Charge 14 is argumentative. Charge 15 pretermits defendant's honest belief that he was in imminent peril. Carroll v. State, supra.
Charge 2, refused to the defendant, undertakes to state the proposition of law approved *130
in Twitty v. State,
The other questions presented have been examined, but we deem further discussion unnecessary. For the error of the court below in sustaining the objection interposed by the solicitor to the introduction in evidence by the defendant of the answer and cross-bill in the divorce proceedings, the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
SAYRE, SOMERVILLE, and GARDNER, JJ., concur.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and THOMAS, JJ., dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
On November 11, 1918, the appellant shot his son-in-law, John Baxter, who a few days later died from his wounds. Read most favorably to the accused, the evidence for defendant put forward this defense only: That Baxter approached a family party on an Anniston street and undertook to take his (Baxter's) four year old child from its mother or its grandmother (defendant's wife); Mrs. Baxter having left her husband, the deceased, about two months before the shooting and returned to the home of her father, this defendant; that Mrs. Baxter resented or resisted this effort of her husband, the deceased, to take the child; that thereupon Baxter struck Mrs. Baxter two or three times in the face; that defendant seeing this, remonstrated with Baxter; and that Baxter thereupon made a motion to his hip pocket, as if to draw a pistol, whereupon defendant shot him twice, once in the thigh, and once in the abdomen, the latter shot causing his death. The thus asserted defense was discredited by the jury. There was abundant evidence that, if credited, warranted that conclusion; the prosecution's contention being that Baxter innocently approached and stopped to see his four year old child, standing on the street in the crowd, and while in the act of fondling his child — whom Mrs. Baxter had two months before taken with her to the defendant's home, where Baxter had been denied the privilege of seeing the child — defendant shot Baxter at a time when Baxter was neither threatening nor menacing any one and was without weapon of any kind. The material issues were, of course, for the jury to decide. The trial was free from any semblance of error, unless, as the majority of the court hold in the opinion ante, the court erred in refusing, upon the state's objection, to permit the introduction in evidence by the defendant of the unsworn answer and cross-bill of Baxter to the original bill for divorce filed by Mrs. Baxter against him; it being signed alone by Baxter's (the deceased's) solicitors, his name not being affixed thereto in any way.
The ruling of the trial court, in excluding that pleading, was fully justified. That action of the trial court had been often approved here, and its correctness never doubted. The following decisions, pointedly invoked by the facts presented for review, so conclude: Stetson v. Goldsmith,
"Bills in equity, not verified by the complainant, are regarded as the suggestions of counsel, and are not evidence of any fact alleged in them, between the same, or other parties, in another suit."
That was the pronouncement in Callan v. McDaniel, supra. That this declaration in these among the other above cited decisions was not dicta is obvious. Aside from other considerations, reference to the personnel of this court at the times Callan v. McDaniel and its several predecessors were decided, as well as to the authorship of the opinions in those decisions, should be enough to demonstrate that something more than the statements of individual compilers, predicated of the deliverances of some courts in other jurisdictions, is necessary to destroy the authority of what our learned elders have, without qualification, so often aptly pronounced. To undertake at this late day to conform the law of decided cases in this state to what text-writers or other courts assert to be the rule elsewhere, is but to superimpose juristic chaos.
The trial court observed the rule of these decisions in this instance. These decisions should be accepted as authority or candidly overruled, in which latter event some reason should be stated for so abrupt a departure from what has been regarded for generations as a settled rule of law; and it might be suggested, by the way, that, if this old and long-observed rule is finally repudiated, attorneys will be subjected to a new, undeserved, and grave burden of responsibility for their acts and statements — a new visitation upon them of the law of principal and agent.
The decisions in Davidson v. Rothschild,
Another conclusive reason against the imputation of error to the trial court in this ruling is that the "answer cross-bill" is without any possible relevancy to the defense asserted in the evidence offered by the defendant. The majority view, affirming error, is that the answer cross-bill "would have enabled the jury, in determining the issues of self-defense, to view the acts of the deceased from the defendant's standpoint"; that it was serviceable on the issue as to "who was the aggressor"; that it "was admissible to show that deceased was contending for the custody of the child * * * by force under such circumstances as existed on the occasion of the homicide in question." This "answer cross-bill" is set out in the transcript. Quite naturally, there is not a word in it that bears the remotest connection with or reference to the subsequent shooting of Baxter by appellant. It expressed no threat. It positively denied the charge of cruelty made by Mrs. Baxter in her original bill. It charged Mrs. Baxter with acts of adultery during defined periods, while they lived together and since their separation, and with a man named therein. It charged that she beat their child unmercifully, that she was not a proper person to have custody of their child, and that he had not been permitted to see the child, either by his wife or the wife of the appellant. It was prayed therein that he be allowed to see the child, toward whom, it was averred, he entertained the "greatest affection," that he be given its custody and permitted to contribute to its wants, and that the bonds of matrimony be dissolved. Deceased had been impleaded by his wife. He thus answered, denying her charges, and sought affirmative relief on the grounds stated. What bearing could that pleading have upon the inquiry who was the aggressor, or upon the issue whether this defendant killed Baxter in self-defense? The fact of their separation and the pendency of this divorce case had been already proven. It was never in dispute. The appellant himself testified (Transcript, pages 54, 55):
"The state of my feelings towards John Baxter at that time, prior to the time that he made this assault on my daughter [i. e., the occasion when he shot Baxter], was all right. * * * I was not mad at John Baxter, up until I saw him strike Mrs. Baxter on Noble street; no hard feelings. My daughter had came home and told me all the trouble; but that didn't make me mad, and I never did get mad at him until I saw him strike my daughter that night."
Even the details of a former difficulty between deceased and appellant, at the time this "answer cross-bill" was filed, would not have been admissible; much less can it be soundly held that the details of a legal controversy, asserted in pleadings, between deceased and his wife, were admissible in this prosecution.
If it should be assumed, in the face of repeated decisions in immediate point, that Baxter's pleading was admissible for the limited purpose of showing the mere fact of the pendency, or his contest, of the divorce case (the majority opinion would admit it for all purposes, without limit), the trial court did not err in excluding it, for "where evidence, admissible for one or more purposes, * * * is offered without restriction or limitation to the purpose for which it is admissible, and the objection is general, the judgment will not be reversed, whether the court sustains or overrules the general objection." W. U. Tel. Co. v. Favish,
This established rule was reaffirmed in the very recent decision of Archer v. Sibley,
In my opinion, this case was carefully and well tried, and the judgment rendered is free from error. I would therefore affirm it.