Court Opinion

ID: 3234219
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:09:09.43586+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:20.265528
License: Public Domain

The defendant, Will Belton, was indicted, tried, and convicted for carnally knowing, or for the abuse in the attempt to carnally know, a girl under the age of 12 years, under section 7699, Code 1907. The jury fixed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for life.
The indictment follows the form (No. 31 [25]) for this offense, which the statute (section 7161, Code 1907) declares is sufficient.
This appeal is on the record proper, without a bill of exceptions, and without the oral charge of the court. The record is regular in form, and follows the requirements of the statutes. We find three written charges in the record, all requested by the defendant. One was given, and two were refused, by the court. The evidence introduced before the jury is not before this court, as there is no bill of exceptions in the record. When the record as to the evidence is in this condition, "this court will presume any state of the evidence which will sustain the giving or refusal of an instruction by the trial court," and we must hold the court did not err in the rulings on the charges given and refused. Beard v. Du Bose,175 Ala. 411, 57 So. 703, 63 So. 318; Lewis L.  L. Co. v. Interstate L. Co., 163 Ala. 592, 50 So. 1036; Shafer  Co. v. Hausman, 139 Ala. 240, 35 So. 691.
The defendant was indicted by the grand jury, and it was returned and filed in the circuit court on September 25, 1923; he was tried, convicted, and sentenced on December *Page 266 
14, 1923. He appealed from this judgment and sentence of the court to this court on December 14, 1923. His sentence was suspended pending this appeal, and it appears he has been in jail, waiting the result thereof, for nearly a year. The record here contains less than five pages. The transcript was certified to on October 28, 1924, and was filed in this court on November 6, 1924, and it was submitted for decision to this court on November 27, 1924. Such delay in the administration of the law, causing unnecessary expense, and, more than this, causing the defendant's confinement in jail for practically a year, is deplorable, and should be remedied.
The record is free from error, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur.