Stanley v. State

88 So. 183 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1921

The record does not affirmatively show that the failure to prove venue was brought to the court's attention before the argument was concluded, or at any time; hence the trial court will not be put in error for a failure to give the affirmative charge on the ground that the venue is not proven. S.Ct. Rule 35; Jones v. State, 13 Ala. App. 10, 68 So. 690.

There was no exception reserved to that part of the court's oral charge defining assault and battery with a weapon, and therefore it will not be here reviewed.

There was no evidence on the trial that would have justified the jury in returning a verdict of "guilty of simple assault and battery." If the offense was assault and battery, it was with a weapon, and the court so charged.

The question asked state witness Kennamer, "What did you arrest this negro for?" was properly allowed, as tending to identify the defendant with the charge for which he was then being tried.

It was competent to prove by the officer Kennamer, to whom the injured party applied to have the defendant arrested, that the party assaulted showed witness a place on his head, and said, "That was where some one of them had hit him." This was shortly after the robbery, and tended to prove the res gestæ.

The witness Oscar Crum having testified on direct examination that he had heard them talking about the time defendant was arrested, it was competent on cross-examination for the solicitor to ask, "How many times has he [defendant] been arrested last year?" for the purpose of testing witness' knowledge as to the time of the arrest in the present case.

As to whether the memory of the injured party was as good after as before the lick on the head at the time of the robbery was not material, but the admission of this testimony was without injury to the defendant. The same is true as to the strength of the injured party.

There are numerous objections to testimony not insisted on in brief, which we have examined, and find that they are without merit, and where the admission was error, it was without injury to defendant.

Charge No. 1 was properly refused. The state is not required to convince the jury beyond any doubt. Beyond a reasonable doubt is all that is required.

Charge No. 2 is faulty for the same reason as that assigned to charge No. 1.

Robbery may be committed without actual violence to the person, and hence charge 5 was bad.

Charge 4 is the affirmative charge, and was properly refused. The question was one for the jury.

Charge 5 was covered by the court's general charge, and its refusal was not error.

We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed. *62

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