Rigell v. State

62 So. 977, 8 Ala. App. 46, 1913 Ala. App. LEXIS 122
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 62 So. 977 (Rigell 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.

Bluebook
Rigell v. State, 62 So. 977, 8 Ala. App. 46, 1913 Ala. App. LEXIS 122 (Ala. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

— The principles . of law applicable to one theory of the defense here are so clearly stated by Judge Coleman, in Hooks v. State, 99 Ala. 168, 13 South. 768, that we quote as folkrws: “Where one person' detects' another ip the act of adultery with his wife, and immediately slays the adulterer or his Avife, as a matter of law the provocation is sufficient to reduce the killing to manslaughter. The law does not declare that anything less than actual sexual intercourse is a sufficient provocation, * * * to reduce the offense from murder to manslaughter. It may be that the detection of . another, under circumstances such as testified to by the defendant, may provoke and engender passion to such a degree as to overthrow reason, and if, under the influence of passion thus aroused, he immediately attack the offending party and' slay him, before cooling time has intervened, not from malice or unlawful formed design, but from such passion thus provoked, the offense may be manslaughter. Whether the party acted under the influence of such a passion, and Avhether the provocation was sufficient, and whether there had been ‘cooling time,’ are questions of fact to be determined by the jury. The principle we announce is that the laAV does not declare the provocation sufficient, unless the parties are detected in the act; but a jury may say Avhether the compromising position of the parties Avas sufficient to arouse passion in the husband to such a degree as to overthrow reason, just as the jury may say in some other cases Avhether the offense Avas the result of sudden and sufficient provocation as to reduce: the offense from murder to manslaughter.” The law, however, never wholly excuses the husband from responsi[49]*49bility for taking the life of his wife’s paramour, even though he comes upon the two in the very act of sexual intercourse, and slays under the sudden heat of the very pasison thereby engendered. The sole extent of the law’s charity, in such a case, is to reduce the homicide, which Avould otherwise be murder, to manslaughter in the first degree. — Hooks v. State, supra; McNeill v. State, 102 Ala. 121, 15 South. 352; 48 Am. St. Rep. 17.

Here the defendant was convicted of only manslaughter in the first degree; and hence that portion of the alleged errors of the trial court which relates exclusively to or affects solely that ground of the defense that was based on the theory that the killing Avas done under a sudden heat of passion Avas, if error, error without injury — whether that heat of passion Avas aroused in the breast of defendant by the fact of his apprehending his Avife and deceased in the act of adultery, or in such compromising position as to indicate it, or Avas engendered by the assault alleged to have been committed on him by the deceased a few moments after such apprehension or discovery. By the verdict the defendant got the full benefit of either of these theories. This being true, and it being further true that on a subsequent trial neither of these issues can arise again (if the defendant, as no doubt he Avill, pleads this verdict, finding him guilty of manslaughter in the first degree, as an acquittal of the charge of murder), we deem it entirely unnecessary to discuss those alleged errors of the trial court Avhich, if errors, are of such character as may be said to be clearly confined in their deleterious or injurious effects solely to the issue as to Avhether defendant was guilty of murder or voluntary manslaughter.

On the next trial (Avhich Ave are of opinion the defendant- is entitled to for reasons hereinafter considered), [50]*50the single issue will be whether defendant is guilty of voluntary manslaughter or guilty of nothing, on account of self-defense — as, under the evidence, the verdict must be one or the other. We will limit our discussion, therefore, to those alleged errors of the trial court which, in our opinion affected, and are calculated on another trial to affect, this single defense; all the other defenses having, as shown, been merged into the verdict of guilty of voluntary manslaughter.

The evidence for the defendant, as to this defense, tended to show that on the night of the killing, he, a young married man, went home about 10 o’clock from the drug store, where he clerked, in the town of Slo-comb; that as he approached his home he discovered that the light in his room was dimly burning; that, before entering the house, he stopped in the yard a few moments, and while standing there he heard somebody on the inside of the house talking in a low tone, whereupon he walked nearer to the house and looked into the room through the window (the inside shade, Avhich covered it, lacking a few inches of being pulled entirely down), when he discovered his wife and a man, whom he did not then recognize, on the bed together; that defendant then ran up the steps to the front door, and through it saw a man going out of the back hall door, whereupon defendant came back down the front steps and ran around the house to the back porch, and found the man standing there on the back porch; that defendant halloed twice, demanding to know who it was, to neither of Avhich demands the man made any reply, but immediately, on the second demand, defendant saw him pull his pistol out of his pocket; and that then the defendant quickly pulled his own, and commenced' to shoot at the man, Avhile he was still standing on the back porch, firing then four shots at him (the only shots [51]*51fired), after which deceased ran. Several witnesses, including the town marshal, testified to finding early the next morning a pistol, covered with dew, on the ground right near the back porch where deceased was standing during the shooting. This pistol was introduced in evidence, and identified by witnesses as being the property of deceased, and as having been seen in his possession on the afternoon of the night of the killing. One Sellers, a neighbor of defendant, heard the shooting that night, and in a few moments afterward saw deceased at his (witness’) yard gate, he having run there from defendant’s house immediately after the shooting. His trousers were unbuttoned, and otherwise bore unmistakable signs of immediate prior sexual intercourse, and he admitted to Sellers that he had been in the wrong place, explaining that he had been in defendant’s house that night while the latter was not at home, and that when defendant came home he (deceased) went out the back door, and defendant went around in the back yard and shot him. Deceased was carried into the home' of the said witness, Sellers, where he died the next morning from the effect of the pistol shot wounds.

In addition to all the foregoing testimony, which we think was material on the issue of self-defense, and which was let in by the court, the defendant also offered to prove that a short time before the killing he, having heard as a rumor that deceased was intimate with his (defendant’s) wife went to deceased, who was a cousin of defendant, and told him about these reports, and requested him not to again visit his home. The court declined to permit this proof. The defendant also offered to prove that in the afternoon before the killing that night deceased told defendant’s witness McLain that he had an engagement with defendant’s wife that night, and that when witness advised him that he had [52]

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 977, 8 Ala. App. 46, 1913 Ala. App. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rigell-v-state-alactapp-1913.