58 So. 809 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
The defendant was tried and convicted of grand larceny. It appears from the evidence, as set out in the bill of exceptions, that in December, 1910, the defendant was conducting a barber shop in the town of Sheffield, when one S. N. Sherman and a friend, named Henry Armenia, went into the shop to get shaved. While in the place being shaved by the defendant, Sherman, according to the state’s evidence, took a package of money tied up with a string, and consisting of two $100 bills and several other bills of smaller denomination, in all amounting to the sum of $500, from his pocket and laid the roll of money on a shelf in front of a mirror. After being waited upon by the defendant, Sherman and his friend, Armenia, left the shop and went into a restaurant next door and ate dinner. Upon coming out of the restaurant, Sherman felt in his pocket for the roll of bills and found that it was not there, and returned immediately to the defendant’s barber shop, which he found locked up, with no one inside. Subsequently» when the defendant came back to the shop, one Atkinson, a policeman of the town, and the chief of police, who had been provided with a search warrant,
The defendánt denied all knowledge of any connection with the money, or of having seen it until the roll of bills was taken from the hole in the floor by the chief of police. Several witnesses were examined by the defendant, who testified to his general good character and reputation for honesty.
On .the cross-examination of the witness Sherman by the defendant, he was asked if he had not been charged
There was no error committed by tbe court in allowing tbe witness Sbont to testify that tbe prosecuting witness stated in bis presence, and in tbe presence of tbe defendant, at tbe time tbe roll of bills was taken by witness from tbe bole in tbe floor, that it was tied in a different way from tbe way be bad tied it.
There was no abuse of the discretion lodged in tbe trial court in tbe cross-examination of tbe defendant.
' The defendant had seen fit to open up the subject relative to the whisky, and it was entirely permissible for the solicitor to go into the matter on cross-examination.—Wall v. State, 2 Ala. App. 157, 56 South. 57.
There is no merit in the objection to the question asked the witness Atkinson as to how long it was from the time the search of the defendant’s premises was stopped by him until the warrant was procured and the search continued.
The refused charge requested by defendant bases an acquittal on part of the evidence, i. e., an acquittal based on a reasonable doubt growing out of a consideration alone of defendant’s good character for honesty. The charge was properly refused.—Coppin v. State, 123 Ala. 58, 26 South. 333; Miller v. State, 107 Ala. 40, 19 South. 37; Goldsmith v. State, 105 Ala. 8, 16 South. 933; Springfield v. State, 96 Ala. 81, 11 South. 250, 38 Am. St. Rep. 85; Grant v. State, 97 Ala. 35, 11 South. 915.
The judgment entry shows that the defendant was sentenced to hard labor for the county for costs at the rate of 40 cents per day, when the sentence should be at the rate of 75 cents per day. The judgment will be here corrected as to the rate, and, as thus corrected, is affirmed.—Code, § 7635; Dowling v. City of Troy, 1 Ala. App. 508, 56 South 116; J. W. Loudermilk v. State, infra, 58 South. 180, and authorities there cited.
Corrected and affirmed.