Court Opinion

ID: 3239586
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:13:17.078711+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:31.797762
License: Public Domain

The indictment was not subject to the demurrers interposed, and the court did not err in overruling them Griggs v. State,18 Ala. App. 467, 93 So. 499.
State witness Albert Davis testified that he knew the defendant Will Wright, and that he saw him run off from a still, and that he saw the still, etc. Under the elementary rule of evidence, the court committed no error in overruling objection of defendant to the question propounded by the solicitor to this witness, "What kind of a still was it?" Nor was there any error in permitting the witness to describe the still in question.
John Weems, witness for the state, testified:
"I was with the officers last year when this raid was made. I was a deputy sheriff and went down to the still where some of the parties were arrested. The defendant was there. He ran. We had been there half or three-quarters of an hour before we went down on them. We were 30 or 40 yards away; we could hear them talking."
Solicitor then asked this witness, "Did they have a still there? To which question defendant interposed several objections. The question was proper, and the court committed no error in overruling the objection. It is permissible for a witness to testify to the substantive fact that they — the defendant and others — had a still, also to describe it, and to state what the defendant and others were doing, at, and just before, the time the officers made the raid. These facts are of the res gestæ of the offense, and are not objectionable as being a conclusion on the part of the witness. Ex parte State ex rel. Davis, 207 Ala. 453, 93 So. 501.
The confessions made by defendant were properly admitted. The predicates for the introduction of these confessions were full and complete and met every requirement. The confessions were shown to have been made freely and voluntarily by defendant. The court properly overruled the objections in this connection.
The defendant offered no testimony, and, at the conclusion of the testimony offered by the state, requested the affirmative charge as to count 1 of the indictment, and as there was no evidence to sustain the charge contained in count 1, the court properly gave said charge to the jury; and after his oral charge submitted the case to the jury under count 2 of the indictment.
There was ample evidence to sustain this count. The mere fact that the jury returned a general verdict of "guilty as charged in the indictment" cannot avail the defendant, and the insistence here made in this connection is without merit. At the instance of the defendant count 1 of the indictment had been charged out by the court, the indictment submitted to the jury therefore contained for their consideration only one count, and the verdict rendered was referable to the charge remaining in the indictment and submitted to the jury by the court. Under no condition could it be made referable to the first count, as the court had given the affirmative charge as to that count, and it was therefore not before the jury for consideration.
The motion for new trial was properly overruled. No error appearing in the record, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed.