Bowling v. State
This text of 90 So. 33 (Bowling v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The appellant was indicted for murder in the first degree, convicted of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of ten years.
There are numerous Objections and exceptions to the introduction of testimony by the state, as well as numerous exceptions to the refusal of the court to permit defendant to introduce certain testimony. In many instances where objections were made to questions propounded by the solicitor and objection made thereto, the record discloses the question was never answered, and we also find in the record many instances where defendant offered to introduce certain testimony and objection thereto was sustained, that such testimony was afterwards brought out, and went to the jury without objection. This much is said in order that it may be understood why each such bit of testimony is not separately discussed herein.
“Right after the fight he found a pistol in Ms store that deceased had left there,” “that immediately after the fight deceased went in his store and got his pistol,” and that after the fight witness “had found some cartridges and a pistol in Ms store, where he had seen the defendant beforehand put something down.”
There are several reasons why the trial court was not in error in excluding this testimony. There was no dispute but that the deceased came to his death from a knife wound inflicted by the defendant; that deceased did not have a pistol at the-time of the difficulty, and at the time of the offer to introduce the above testimony there had been no testimony offered tending to show self-defense. The acts sought to be shown cannot from the evidence he said to be of “the res geste, nor was there any testimony to show that the defendant knew of the circumstances referred to. Crumpton v. State, 167 Ala. 4, 52 South. 605; Robinson v. State, 108 Ala. 14, 18 South. 732; Wilson v. State, 140 Ala. 43, 37 South. 93.
Moreover, the exclusion of the testimony could not have been hurtful to the defendant, for evidence of this character, if true, could have but tended to show that the deceased had disarmed himself before the fatal difficulty. We are also of the opinion that the above cases uphold the correctness of the ruling of the trial court in refusing to permit the witness Ham to testify that after the difficulty he took charge of a pistol that belonged to deceased at the Boll Tailoring Company, and in refusing to permit the witness Dorby to testify that shortly before the difficulty deceased purchased some cartridges from him. Crumpton v. State, supra.
*233 and powerful man was inadmissible, as a mere conclusion of the witness.
Refused written charges 12 and 13 were substantially given in written charges 9 and 10.
We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment of the trial court is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
90 So. 33, 18 Ala. App. 231, 1921 Ala. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowling-v-state-alactapp-1921.