65 So. 376 | Ala. | 1914
The affidavit with which appellant, defendant in the court below, began his prosecution against the appellee charged that appellee did feloniously sever and carry away from the lands of James A. Sherrill, 30 cedar trees, which were growing on said lands, and which were of the value of $30, the property of Randolph Sandlin. In the connection used “feloniously” means “with intent to steal.” The affidavit was notably defective and demurrable, but upon a fair interpretation we do not doubt that it was intended to charge appellee with the crime of larceny, and that, if suffered to go unchallenged by demurrer, such language would sustain a conviction under section 7324 of the Code which defines grand larceny. The charge
It sufficiently appeared that the order of the Morgan county law and equity court, striking the cause from the docket of that court, was made in the course of the prosecution declared upon, though the magistrate misapprehended the nature of the charge against the plaintiff here, and so incorrectly labeled it, and had mistakenly sent the case to the court instead of the grand jury where it belonged. We are of the opinion, also, that this dismissal of the cause was an end of the prosecution.—Stewart v. Blair, 171 Ala. 147, 54 South. 506, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 925. Othenvise plaintiff might have been left without remedy for a great violation of his personal rights—a result not to be contemplated as possible under the laAv which “professes to furnish a remedy for every wrong.”—Southern Car Co. v. Adams, 131 Ala. 147, 32 South. 503.
The instruction made the subject of the- forty-second assignment of error was well refused to defendant, for the reason that it had a tendency to mislead the jury to
Charge 25, per contra, in which the court was requested to instruct the jury that they might look to the fact that the inferior court of Hartselle adjudged plaintiff guilty in determining whether defendant had probable cause, was well refused, for the reason that it singled out that fact, pretermitting much other evidence relevant and material to that inquiry.
Charges requested by defendant on the subject of the effect of the legal advice obtained by defendant before swearing out the warrant against plaintiff fall short of a complete and satisfactory statement of the law of that subject, for the reason that they fail to hypothesize defendant’s reliance and action upon that advice in good faith.—McLeod v. McLeod, 73 Ala. 42; Steed v. Knowles, 79 Ala. 446.
We need not consider other assignments of error separately. Some of them are obviously without merit. We have said enough to indicate our opinion in respect to the rest. No error appearing, the judgment will be affirmed.