Reeves v. State
This text of 68 So. 569 (Reeves 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 facts necessary to a proper understanding of the case will be found in the opinion on the former appeal of the case. See Reeves v. State, 186 Ala. 14, 65 South. 160.
The only questions insisted upon on this appeal as constituting error relate to certain exceptions taken to parts of the oral charge of the court in defining the duty under the law of self-defense of the defendant to retreat and avoid the difficulty.
The criticism and exception are directed at the court’s use of the word “possible,” as exacting a higher degree of the defendant in the connection in which it is used [4]*4.■as above set out than the law requires. The oral charge ■of the court is not set out as a whole, but it is recited in this same connection in the bill of exceptions that “the court defined and explained to the jury the law of •self-defense.” This statement in the bill of exceptions •can only mean, when given the proper construction as there used, under the well-known rules of construing bills of exceptions, that the court correctly defined and •explained the law of self-defense. If so, and also in another part of the oral charge, in charging upon the same matter with respect to the law of retreat, the court used language that might be construed as requiring that the defendant, in avoiding a difficulty or declining a combat, is required to use all possible avenues of avoidance •or retreat, without regard to whether they are such as would be apparent to a reasonable man and available to him in the exercise of reasonable prudence Avithout increasing his real or reasonably apparent danger, this would not authorize a reversal; for, under the rule requiring the oral charge to be construed as a whole, no part of the charge is to be considered as dissociated from •other parts of the charge, and, if some sentence, taken ■alone and unexplained, is erroneous or subject to criticism for inaccuracy, this is not enough to require a reversal of the judgment, if the court has fairly stated the ■proposition correctly in other parts of the charge.—Williams v. State, 83 Ala. 68, 3 South. 743; McMurphy v. State, 4 Ala. App. 20, 58 South. 748; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Snell, 3 Ala. App. 263, 56 South. 854. Construed under the rule stated, the excerpt from the charge made the basis of exception, at most, was but misleading, and the •duty Avas upon the defendant to correct any misleading tendency that portion of the charge might have, by asking written charges covering the point. That the de[5]*5fendant received the full benefit- from adopting such a course is manifest from an examination of the written charges which are set out in the transcript that were given at his request.
No other question is discussed by counsel for defendant in brief, and an examination of the record discloses no reversible error, nor any other matter meriting discussion.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
68 So. 569, 13 Ala. App. 1, 1915 Ala. App. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-v-state-alactapp-1915.