Fondren v. State
This text of 86 So. 71 (Fondren v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
If the appellant committed the homicide for which he was tried and convicted, and of this fact under the evidence there is little, if any, room for doubt and was at tbe time legally responsible, he was guilty of a most dastardly and heinous murder.
“If the jury find from the evidence that the defendant killed deceased while in an insane condition, caused hy disease of the mind, which disease deprived him of the power to resist the impulse to do the act, then he would not be guilty by reason of insanity.”
As worded, the charge is open to the criticism that the “insane condition” referred to the deceased rather than the defendant, and as thus written, if not otherwise faulty,- was not such a clear exposition of the law as that the court was bound to give it. The charge, however, undertakes to state the rule as applicable to one who, though insane, is capable of perceiving the difference between right and wrong, yet is laboring under the duress of the disease to such extent as to destroy his power to choose the right and abstain from the. wrong, and pretermits the essential element that the disease of the brain must he the sole cause, and the crime the direct product or effect of such disease. Parsons v. State, 81 Ala. 577, 596, 597, 2 South. 854.
*453
Finding no error in the record, the judgment appealed from will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
86 So. 71, 204 Ala. 451, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fondren-v-state-ala-1920.