Court Opinion

ID: 3237882
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:11:57.451934+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:58:56.343665
License: Public Domain

The motion for new trial is not presented for review. Crawley v. State, 16 Ala. App. 545, 79 So. 804, and cases cited.
The only questions insisted upon as error on the trial of this cause in the court below relate to the ruling of the court upon the testimony.
State's witness Mrs. Smith Oyler wife of the injured party, was permitted, without objection, to testify that the defendant Oscar Baker, shortly before the difficulty, came to the Oyler home, and requested Oyler, her husband, who was a police officer of the town of Collinsville, to come down town at once; that one Irby Edwards had cut a drummer's coat off of him, etc. But when Oyler himself was upon the stand as a witness the defendant objected to him being allowed to testify to these same facts already in evidence. The court overruled the objection, and defendant excepted. There was no error in this ruling. The evidence itself was competent in order to shed light upon the conduct of the defendant, who in a few minutes thereafter undisputedly had the serious difficulty with Oyler, and this evidence was properly submitted to the jury, to be considered by them as to whether the defendant thus enticed Oyler from his home for the accomplishment of the very purpose of the act complained of in the indictment, elements of the charge necessarily being premeditation and deliberation.
There was no error in the courts allowing the solicitor on cross-examination of defendant's witness Lambert to ask him "Were you there when some one ran down the street with a wheelbarrow?" In the first place there could not possibly be anything prejudicial to the defendant by asking this question. It clearly related to the res gestæ. Moreover, this witness on direct examination had testified as to when he arrived upon the scene, and what had occurred since his arrival, and had just stated in his direct examination, "No, Sir; I was not there when some one broke a lantern over the sidewalk." Witness was then turned over to the solicitor for cross-examination and the first question propounded to witness by solicitor was the question above quoted, "Were you there when some one ran down the street with a wheelbarrow?" Under all the rules of evidence this question was permissive, and there is no merit whatever in the exception reserved to the ruling of the court in this connection. *Page 50 
No special charges were requested by defendant, and the last insistence of appellant that "the verdict of the jury was contrary to the great weight of the evidence" is not only without merit, but is not properly before us for review. Strickland v. Town of Samson, 16 Ala. App. 592, 80 So. 166; Woodson v. State, 170 Ala. 87, 54 So. 191.
The evidence was in sharp conflict, and therefore presented a jury question. The court's oral charge was a clear and able statement of the law of the case, it was extremely fair to the defendant, and no exception was reserved thereto, but if there had been, the charge was free from error, and an exception could have availed nothing to the defendant. There was no error upon the trial of this case, and as the record is also free from error the judgment of conviction in the circuit court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.