2 So. 2d 333 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1941
Appeal from a conviction of assault with intent to murder. One Matchen, night watchman in Guntersville, Alabama, testified that he sought to arrest the defendant on one of the streets of the city, at which time defendant was drunk and cursing his wife; that defendant resisted arrest, knocked him down with a piece of pipe, took his pistol from him, hitting him with it, and then fled the scene. Matchen claims to have received certain injuries. Thus, the trial upon the charge aforesaid.
We deem it hardly necessary to observe that if the defendant, as testified to, was on the street, drunk, and cursing his wife, he was committing a public offense. Code 1923, Section 3883, Code 1940, Tit. 14, § 120. If Matchen was an officer of the law, the offense being committed in his presence, it was his duty to arrest him. Dyson v. State,
Proof that the defendant fled and was later apprehended in a distant state by the "Federal Authorities" was admissible as a circumstance against him. Lance v. State,
Likewise, it was competent to prove, by way of impeachment of the testimony of the defendant, that a scar on his face had been produced by a blow inflicted by another officer upon a different occasion, the defendant having already testified that Matchen had struck him, thereby causing the scar.
It appears that there were two indictments pending against the defendant, the one first preferred being imperfect in form. The defendant, however, was tried upon the one later preferred which was in all respects sufficient to charge the offense. There is no merit in the insistence that the defendant was prejudiced by being placed upon trial on the last indictment, although the first was still pending. Bell v. State,
The remaining insistences of error have been carefully considered and the entire case studied. We do not find error appearing. The case, in our opinion, should be affirmed. So ordered.
Affirmed. *158