107 Ala. 13 | Ala. | 1894
The defendant was tried for the offense of arson in the third degree, under the statute, and convicted. The State’s evidence tended to show that she was'seen between 8 and 9 o’clock at night to approach the house that was burned, with a jug in her hand; and on reaching it, began pouring oil on it from the jug, and struck a match and set fire to the oil. She then took up the jug and started to run away, when Nathan Hill, the owner of the house, fired a gun at her as she ran. Nathan Hill is one of the witnesses who testified to seeing the defendant commit the offense, as above stated; and he was asked by the State if he had ever seen the jug before, to which he replied that, several weeks before the burning he and Will Thomas, the husband of defendant, were getting shingles in the woods, and that they had that same jug with them, with kerosene oil in it, and that it was left in the possession of said Will Thomas. The defendant objected to this testimony, on the ground that it was irrelevant and incompetent, and that possession of the jug by some one else did not bind the defendant. The court properly overruled the objection. Tfie fact that the jug belonged to, and was in possession of her husband before the burning, was a circumstance going to show opportunity in the defendant to have it in her possession at the time of the burning, and to identify -her
In Coleman v. State, 59 Ala. 52, we ruled that a charge, the same, in substance, as the first requested by the defendant in this case, should have been given, and reversed the judgment of the court below on account of its refusal; but in more recent rulings we have departed from that decision, and, under their influence, now hold the charge was properly refused. Bonner v. State, post herein, p. 97.
The charge requested by the defendant, on the subject of flight, clearly invaded the province of the jury and was properly refused.'
Affirmed.