Court Opinion

ID: 3251091
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:21:59.552168+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:05:22.798642
License: Public Domain

The appellant being first convicted in the recorder's court of violating an ordinance of the city of Selma, prohibiting the traffic, etc., in forbidden liquors, took an appeal to the circuit court, where the jury found him guilty and assessed a fine. On sentence, the court imposed upon him an additional penalty of 90 days at hard labor for the city. This action was free from error. Murray Guin v. City of Tuscaloosa, ante, p. 61, 106 So. 64.
The court neither committed error nor abused its discretion in such matters, in sustaining the state's objection to the question by defendant's counsel during his cross-examination of the witness Moore, "Prior to that time, Mr. Moore, had Mr. O'Flynn assisted you at any time in locating liquor?" It would not have made any difference whether he had or not. The matter called for was clearly irrelevant to any issue being tried.
The exceptions reserved to portions of the trial court's oral charge are clearly without merit. Considered as a whole, as we must consider it, the said oral charge was thoroughly fair to defendant. The issues in the case, or rather the issue, was clearly and correctly defined, and in a manner as favorable to defendant as he had the right to ask. The case is clearly distinguishable on both facts and principle from that of Allen v. State (Ala.App.) 104 So. 867.1 In the instant case the defendant's own testimony, when taken in connection with the other testimony, we think sufficient to carry the question of his guilty connection with the liquor involved to the jury. The general affirmative charge requested by appellant was properly refused.
The defendant appears to have had a fair trial, and, finding nowhere any prejudicial error, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
1 Ante, p. 23.