The witness, John W: Martin, testified, for defendant, to the latter’s good character for peace and quiet. The State, on cross-examination, asked the witness if ho had not heard of an affray or fight in which the defendant participated. This wаs competent, not for the purpose of showing that defendant was not a peaceable and quiet man, but fоr the purpose of shedding light on the credibility of the witness’s statement that defendant’s character was good for peace and quiet.— Lowery v. State,
The court properly refused to admit evidence of the dеfendant’s good character whilst confined in jail under the charge for which he was being tried. Evidence of charaсter must be confined to the time of, and anterior to, the alleged commission of the offense for which he is being tried.
Thе dying declaration testified to by the witness, Chaney Mitchell, was properly admitted. It, in connection with her condition and аlmost immediate death, carried, with itself, sufficient evidence of a sense of impending death, to justify the court in admitting it. But,
The mаtter of the first charge requested by defendant was not such as to which the court was under duty to instruct the jury.
The second charge was wrong in principle, argumentative and properly refused.
Charge number 4 was as follows: ‘‘The flight of a defendant, in a criminal case, may or may not be considered as a circumstance tending to prove guilt, depending on the motive which prompted it, whether a consciousness of guilt and a pending apprehension of being brought to justice сaused the flight, or whether it was caused from some other and more innocent motive, and the jury may look to the fact that he went to police headquarters and gave himself up.”
In Bowles v. State,
In Sylvester v. State,
The evidence shows that the defendant committed the homicide about 2 оr 3 o’clock in the morning, that he fled from the place, and went directly to police headquarters about two milеs distant, reported to the sergeant of police what he had done, and surrendered himself and the gun with which he had cоmmitted the act to that officer. There is, in the evidence, no other fact or circumstance touching the subject of flight. It is evident, therefore, that what the defendant did, in respect of flight, carried with it no evidence of a consciousness of guilt. It was no more than a commission of the homicide, flight from the place, and an immediate, voluntary surrender by the perpetrator to the constitutеd authorities confessing that he had committed it. Referred to this state of proof, the charge was correct, had no misleading tendency because of the singling out of a fact from other facts, and ought to have been given. It was nоt objectionable for referring specially to the duty of the jury to look to’ the surrender, for that, with the accompanying declarations of the defendant which constituted a part of the surrender, was the only circumstance which the jury could consider.
For the errors pointed out the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. Let the defendant remain, in custody until discharged by due course of law.
Reversed and remanded.
