Court Opinion

ID: 9825435
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 12:58:32.002233+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:48.584136
License: Public Domain

RICE, J.
Appellant was convicted of the offense of manslaughter in the first degree and sentenced to serve a term of six years imprisonment in the state penitentiary. He was a policeman in the town of Phenix City, and killed one Charles Wilkerson while attempting to place the said Wilkerson under arrest, or to take him to the city jail, for the alleged offense of public drunkenness. While ■ certain phases of the testimony lead us to question, in our minds, whether we, if we had been sitting as jurors, trying the case, would have arrived at a verdict of guilt against the appellant, yet the verdict returned finds clear support in the evidence, and we are without authority to overturn the action of the trial court, who saw and heard the witnesses, in denying appellant’s motion for a new trial, as for any insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the jury’s finding.
There appear in the transcript certain written charges, indorsed “Given,” whether at the request of appellant or the state not being shown. And not in each case can we tell, from a reading of the charge so indorsed, at whose instance it was requested. Then there appears, following the said “Given” charges, some remarks by the court explaining some one or other of said charges. We cannot review the action of the trial court, complained of in this connection, by appellant’s counsel, by reason of the fact that we cannot tell, from the transcript before us, the explanation that was made of any particular “given” charge. We might 'say that no prejudicial error is apparent because of the fact that the very full and fair oral charge of the court, when read in connection with the charges indorsed “Given,” reveals that every phase of the applicable law was given to the jury, and in a way that was as favorable to appellant as he could ask. Nothing in the “explanatory” remarks, set out in the record, following the “given” charges, causes us to alter this statement.
The written charges, appearing in the record, indorsed “Refused,” and shown to have been requested by appellant, have each been examined by us. Each of them, in so far as it states a correct proposition of law, and is not elliptical, confused, or otherwise faulty, we find to be in substance given to the jury in the oral charge of the court, in connection with the given written charges. 1
We have given the record careful study. There appears nowhere any prejudicial error, and the judgment must be, and is, affirmed.
Affirmed.