Shorter v. State

63 Ala. 129
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 63 Ala. 129 (Shorter 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.

Bluebook
Shorter v. State, 63 Ala. 129 (Ala. 1879).

Opinion

STONE, J.

The defendant was indicted under section 4109,’ Code of 1876, for carrying concealed about his person a pistol. The defense was, that he was threatened with, or had good reason to apprehend an attack. If the jury believed the testimony of the three witnesses examined for the State, a prima facie case against the accused was shown. Defendant then proved that, in a letter written by one Sharp, to the chief of police, as we infer, and only a few days before the occurrence out of which this indictment grew, Sharp stated, that “ he did not wish to violate the law, or to be arrested for violating the law, but that he understood that defendant had made threats against him (Sharp), and that he was consequently carrying concealed about his person a pistol.” The witness, chief of police, testified that, immediately after he received said letter, he showed it to the accused, who read it, and remarked, “ that he would pull Sharp’s beard, or that he ought to pull his beard.” Another witness, to whom the letter was shown (the letter had been destroyed, and was not produced), described its contents substantially as the first witness had done, and added, that he had heard defendant was carrying a pistol for Sharp. The difficulty, hereafter referred to, between the defendant and Sharp, appears to have had some connection with a State prosecution before a justice of the peace, of a person called “Happy John,” prosecuted by Sharp, and defended by the defendant in this cause, as counsel. On a previous day, when said cause was called for trial, Sharp moved for a continuance, when defendant remarked, Sharp “would swear to anything.” Sharp made no reply. It was also shown that, on the day preceding the rencontre, after mentioned, Sharp and the defendant [131]*131were, at the same time, in the law-office of another attorney» and “that they were apparently friendly.”

The bill of exceptions recites that it contains all the evidence ; and the foregoing is all the testimony bearing on the question of excuse for carrying the pistol concealed about the person. There is not a word in it, or inference to be drawn from it, tending, in the remotest degree, to show that the defendant had been threatened with, or' had any reason to apprehend an attack. On the contrary, the letter of Sharp, the contents of which were known to the defendant, repelled all idea that he, Sharp, meditated an attack. That letter contained the only evidence offered that Sharp was carrying a pistol, and also stated the reason he gave for carrying it. The contents-of the letter were put in evidence by the defendant, for the purpose, we must suppose, of making good his excuse for carrying a pistol. Putting Sharp’s admission in evidence, he was bound to take it as it was made, and could not be allowed to reject a part of the statement, which he thought would operate against him. If any part went to the jury, all he said on the same subject, in the same conversation or letter, must be laid before them, to be weighed by them. The jury were not bound to believe all, but it could not be garbled in laying it before them. They must be taken altogether — that which makes for the party, as well as that which makes against him. The jury are not bound to give equal credence to every part.” — 1 Brick. Dig. 835, § 437. If the defendant desired to have the jury instructed in the rules for weighing such admissions, this was a subject for a charge, not a ground for excluding any part of the evidence. Taken altogether, the letter, if considered as evidence of Sharp’s feelings and purposes, tended to show he was carrying the pistol for defense against an attack he apprehended from the defendant, and with no view of himself becoming an aggressor. The City Court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury, “ that what Sharp had said in the letter, about any threats made by defendant, could not be considered by them as evidence.”

Although, as we have said, we fail to find in the record any evidence that defendant had been threatened with, or had good reason to apprehend an attack, still some testimony had been laid before the jury, which was obviously relied on as tending to show such excuse for carrying the pistol; and, as it can not be known what influence slight circumstances in evidence may exert on juries, the court did not err in receiving rebutting evidence. The conduct of the parties, on each of the occasions when they were before the justice of the peace, and especially the circumstances immediately [132]*132preceding and attending the rencontre on the last of those occasions, were certainly admissible evidence on the inquiry, whether the defendant apprehended an attack from Sharp, or meditated an attack upon Sharp. If the latter, then it furnished no excuse to him for carrying the pistol. So, that the parties were together, and “ apparently friendly,” on the day preceding the difficulty, and subsequent to the date of Sharp’s letter to the chief of police, was a circumstance tending to repel the idea that Sharp contemplated an attack on defendant. — See Baker v. The State, 49 Ala. 350; Eslava v. The State, Ib. 355. We reaffirm the doctrine declared in Stroud’s case, 55 Ala. 77, that “ the motive, the purpose of carrying the weapon, must have been defense against violence, which has been threatened, or which'is reasonably apprehended. If this is not the motive — if offense, not defense, is the real purpose, though facts may exist which would [otherwise?] justify the carrying the weapon concealed, the statute is violated.”

If the witnesses in rebuttal are thought to have gone too far in giving the particulars of the altercation and combat, then the objection should have been confined to that part of the evidence, which it is alleged was in excess of what the rule allows. Manifestly the court below did not err in receiving evidence of the words and conduct of each party immediately preceding the assault, of the person by whom the first assault was made, and in what manner provoked and resented. All this tended to determine the question, whether the defendant apprehended an attack on him, or meditated an assault on Sharp. The objection and motion to exclude were directed against all testimony of this combat, and did not separate the legal .from the illegal, if any part was illegal. The court was not bound to separate the legal from the illegal portions of the evidence, but need only respond to the motion as made.. The court did not err in overruling this objection.

That the pistol was carried by the defendant concealed about his person, appears to be one of the uncontroverted facts in this case. The defense, or exculpation, assumes two phases: first, that the accused was threatened with an attack; and, second, that he had good reason to apprehend an attack. Either of these, if proved to the satisfaction of the jury, is sufficient, without invoking the other. The first is a fact, and, like any other fact, is susceptible of direct, positive proof. The threat, to amount to a defense, must be real, not simulated, or simply apparent. In the absence of an actual, real threat, it can not be affirmed that the accused has been threatened with an attack. The other phase of the defense [133]*133rests on different principles. Report of threats, believed to be true, though in fact untrue; hostile demonstrations; preparation for attack, real or apparent, and the entire conduct of the parties, may be considered by the jury, in a conscientious inquiry, whether the defendant had just grounds to apprehend an attack.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Ala. 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shorter-v-state-ala-1879.