Wise v. State

66 So. 128, 11 Ala. App. 72, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 10
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 66 So. 128 (Wise 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
Wise v. State, 66 So. 128, 11 Ala. App. 72, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 10 (Ala. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

PELHAM, J.

The appellant was indicted for murder in the first degree, tried, and convicted of murder in the second degree.

In the trial court the defendant made a motion, that it strenuously insisted upon in briefs filed here, to quash the indictment, based on the misconduct of an attorney, -employed to assist in the prosecution, going before the grand jury while it was engaged in deliberating on the case. It is alleged as grounds for the motion that the attorney made improper statements to the grand jury that influenced or induced the.grand jury to return the indictment against the defendant. This motion is shown [78]*78not to have been made until after the defendant had been arraigned and pleaded to the merits of the indictment, and was within the discretion of the trial court and not reviewable here. — Hubbard v. State, 72 Ala. 164; Davis v. State, 131 Ala. 10, 31 South. 569; Thayer v. State, 138 Ala. 39, 35 South. 406; Rogers v. State, 166 Ala. 10, 52 South. 33.

The question is not before this court for the additional reason that the court’s ruling on the motion is not shown by a judgment entry set out in the record, but only by the recitals contained in the bill of exceptions. —Garrett v. State, 97 Ala. 18, 14 South. 327; Conway v. Clark, 171 Ala. 391, 55 South. 117. The transcript shows nearly 100 exceptions to the rulings of the trial court on the admission and rejection of evidence, and 84 assignments of error have been written upon the transcript by appellant’s counsel, but, after reading the voluminous record and briefs, and giving careful attention to the matters presented, we do not deem it beneficial, or that it would serve any proper purpose to enter into a discussion of each of these matters in detail.

The deceased was a married woman who lived at home with her husband. It seems to be the theory of the state, to be gathered from the evidence, that it relied upon showing, as a motive for the killing, that the defendant was angered, or made jealous, by the attentions of one Hub Patrick to the deceased. Patrick, as. a witness for the state, testified to a difficulty he had with the defendant on the night of, but some two hours before, the killing, that took place in the yard of the house of the deceased, near a window from which the deceased heard and saw part of the altercation, at a time when her husband was not at home — a fact which, it seems, was known to both men before going to the home of the deceased. After proving the fact that the defendant [79]*79had a difficulty with Patrick at this time, under these circumstances, the state was allowed, against numerous objections made and exceptions reserved by the defendant, to go into the details of the difficulty, and show by Patrick that the defendant jerked him over and cursed him, calling him by vile names, and threatening to kill him; that the defendant choked him until he could not speak, and hit him three or four times in the face with his fist; that after the defendant jerked him over flat on his back he got astride of him and hit him; that the defendant informed the deceased, who had come to the window of her house, that he intended to kill him (Patrick), using oaths in connection with the threat; that upon the deceased’s telling them to leave, the defendant got off of him, and that he went under the house to get away from the defendant. The evidence in behalf of the state showed that the defendant left the premises of the deceased after this occurrence, and that the killing did not take place until some two hours afterwards, when, it is the contention of the state, he had returned to the home of the deceased. It was the theory of the defense that the defendant was a friend of the husband of the deceased, and that after the occurrence with Patrick at the home of deceased he left, and that the deceased, in an hour or two thereafter, committed suicide.

The difficulty between the defendant and Patrick cannot be said, under the circumstances shown, to constitute a part of the res gestae of the act of homicide; it did not constitute one continuous transaction with it, nor was it substantially contemporaneous, so as to make the details of this difficulty with a third party admissible as illustrating the character of the main fact, or crime charged. — State v. Stallings, 142 Ala. 112, 38 South. 261. The fact, general nature, and occasion of a former difficulty between the defendant and Patrick [80]*80was, of course, admissible to support the theory of the state in tending to show a motive actuating the defendant in the commission of the crime charged against him, and to show that the defendant entertained animus or ill will against the deceased, growing out of, or based on, feelings of jealousy. But the details of the encounter would not furnish a reason or show a motive for the homicide, or tend to explain or illustrate its character— would not have any legitimate tendency to establish the theory of the state, and is so far separated from the act charged, as to time, circumstance, and person, as to constitute no part of the res gestae of that act. — Garrett v. State, 76 Ala. 18; Still v. State, 91 Ala. 10, 8 South. 669, 24 Am. St. Rep. 853; Jones v. State, 76 Ala. 9; Quin v. State, 1 Ala. App. 116, 55 South. 450.

It is insisted by the state’s counsel in brief that, as the defendant subsequently testified about this difficulty and went into the particulars, the error in admitting the details of the difficulty when testified to by the state’s witness Patrick, against the defendant’s objection, was cured. This argument is fallacious in more than one aspect. Non constat the defendant would not have testified as to the details of this difficulty if he had not been forced to do so because of the testimony of Patrick as to these matters previously admitted against his objection; and then, too, the details of the difficulty as subsequently narrated by the defendant when testifying as a witness in his own behalf differed with respect to the detailed particulars of the difficulty as testified to by the witness Patrick, and it may he that the jury believed the details as narrated by the witness Patrick, and did not believe the defendant’s testimony on this point, and, adopting “falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus,” as applied to the defendant’s testimony, discredited the defendant’s testimony as to material and vital matters testified to by [81]*81him, in which he denied having any connection with the commission of the offense charged against him, and solely because of this variance between his testimony and the testimony of the witness Patrick on the illegally admitted evidence. The evidence relied upon for a conviction, aside from the testimony of a nine-year-old child of the deceased, that, according to the testimony of several of the defendant’s witnesses, had made several contradictory statements about the matter, was entirely circumstantial in its nature, and ive are unable to say, under such a state of conflicting evidence as is shown by this record, that the defendant was not prejudiced by the admission of the illegal evidence relating to the details of a difficulty with a third party, as testified to by that party, against the defendant’s objections and duly reserved exceptions to the court’s rulings in admitting such matters in evidence.

It was proper to permit the state’s witness Mrs. Willis to testify that the deceased, Mrs. Griffin, was “about 25 or 30 years old — about there. She was comparatively young.” Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
66 So. 128, 11 Ala. App. 72, 1914 Ala. App. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-v-state-alactapp-1914.