Lead Opinion
The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to the penitentiary for twenty-five years.
In Green v. State,
Testimony showing the violent character of the deceased, on the issue of self-defense, is relevant for the purpose of throwing light upon the killing, the demeanor of the respective parties, the just apprehension of the accused. — Green v. State, supra; Perry v. State, supra; Roberts v. State, supra; Storey v. State,
The question propounded to the witness, to which objections were sustained by the court — whether witness “did not know that the deceased had cut or shot a man in Bessemer,” and that deceased had been in trouble on account of “having cut or shot at more than one person in Bessemer” — were improper. — Sorrelle v. Craig,
A witness may give his opinion of the character of the deceased for peace and quiet or for turbulence and violence, if he knew that character, where it appears to be based in part upon the estimate of such character in decedent’s neighborhood.— Roberson v. State,
In Mitchell v. State,
“The character of the accused in this respect can be made an issue only by the accused offering proof of his good character, and when he does, the state may offer countervailing evidence of his general bad character in the respect in which it has been made an issue (Smith v. State, supra), or may, on cross-examination of the defendant’s witness, show reports or rumors current in the community of defendant’s residence before the alleged criminal act under investigation derogatory to his good character in the respect he has put it in issue, for the purpose of showing that the witness was mistaken in his estimate of defendant’s character. * * *
“What we have said above applies only to character evidence admissible as exculpatory evidence. If the accused testifies as a witness, the credibility of his testimony may be impeached, like any other witness, by showing his general bad character; but in cases where the character of the accused in both respects is made an issue, to avoid impinging the principles above stated, the im*199 peaching evidence, when requested by the accused, should be limited by the court to the purpose of impeaching the credibility of the witness. — McGuire v. State,2 Ala. App. 219 ,57 South. 57 ; Byers v. State,105 Ala. 31 ,16 South. 716 ; Fields v. State,121 Ala. 16 ,25 South. 726 ; Sweatt v. State,156 Ala. 85 ,47 South. 194 .”
In the case of Shelby Iron Company v. Greenlea,
It has been often held by this court that every fact the testimony tends to prove, and every legitimate inference that may be drawn from the facts in evidence, are proper subjects of discussion by counsel in their arguments to the jury. The rule is thus stated by Mr. Justice Stone, in Cross v. State,
In Childress v. State,
So in Dollar v. State,
The rule declared in Cross’s Case, supra, has been reaffirmed by later decisions of this court. — Hill v. State,
There was evidence adduced by the state from which the concubinage of the defendant with the deceased may be inferred, and likewise evidence, for the defendant, from which a common law marriage between defendant and the deceased may be inferred. While the state is not required to show motive, yet the relation of the parties, and all the circumstances attendant on the homicide, may be given in evidence, to shed light upon the question of ill-will, malice or hatred by the defendant entertained towards the deceased — facts which tend to shed light on the question of motive that would or would not actuate the defendant to the commission of the crime. If the association of the defendant and the deceased had been that of lawful marriage, and there existed between them no grievance or bad feeling, the probabilities for the commission of so heinous a crime would be less than if the relation had been that of illicit intercourse and one of the parties
The solicitor’s employment of the expression, that the defendant at the time of the killing was “already violating the law,” is explained by the subsequent words — “living in adultery with the deceased as his concubine,” and did not mean more than this subsequent statement. The argument was clearly within the inference of the evidence, and was not otherwise improper.
The case is affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur, but wish to guard my concurrence against holding that the defendant’s general bad character after the offense can ever be inquired into for any purpose. His character for truth and veracity may be shown, up to the time of the trial; but the evidence must be limited to that sole purpose, and this cannot be done by showing his general bad character, after the offense, though the general bad character, as a rule, tends to impeach, or go to the credibility of a witness.
