Court Opinion

ID: 7810643
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-07 17:12:27.001733+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:30:27.071104
License: Public Domain

Hart, J. Dan Morris prosecutes this appeal to reverse a judgment of conviction against him for the crime of robbery. The evidence is sufficient to support the verdict. The indictment charges Dan Morris to have robbed C. C. Baker in the city of Little Bock, in Pulaski County, Arkansas, in March, 1920. C. C. Baker was the prosecuting witness. According to his testimony he resided in the city of Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas, at the time the robbery occurred. He had come in from .Shreveport, Louisiana, on the night of the 26th of March, 1920, and arrived in Little Rock on the night of the 27th inst. at the Union Station. He started to walk home between 3 and 4 o ’clock in the morning. On his way there he was stopped by a couple of. negroes and robbed. One of them stuck a pistol in his face and the other one grabbed him and went through his pockets, taking therefrom the sum of $118 in money. Dan Morris was the one who went through his pockets and took the money from him. Baker positively identified Morris as the one who took the money from his pockets and said that he looked at him all the time the robbery was being committed. The defense of Dan Morris was an alibi, and he introduced a number of witnesses who testified that he was in another part of the city at the time Baker says he was robbed. T. R. Gentry was in the court room during the trial and remembered that he had seen an account of the robbery in the paper the next morning after it occurred. This brought to his mind that he had seen the defendant on the streets of Little Rock on the night of the robbery at an hour, when, according to the defendant and his witnesses, he was in a house in another portion of the city. Counsel for the defendant insist that the court erred in not granting him a new trial for newly discovered evidence. The witness, Gentry, had testified that he had been to church on the night the robbery occurred and had seen Balter on the streets on his way home between 11:30 and 12 o ’clock p. m: In support of his motion he offered the affidavits of several personé who swore that they were at the church on the oocasiofi testified to by the witness Gentry, and that it was a different night to that testified to by him. It has often been held by this court that as a general rule newly discovered evidence that goes only to impeach the credibility of a witness is no ground for a new trial, Jones v. State, 72 Ark. 404, and cases cited, and Dewein v. State, 114 Ark. 472. The newly discovered evidence in the case at bar is no exception to the general rule. The main witness for the State was the person who had been robbed. Gentry was introduced by the State to corroborate his testimony, and the newly discovered evidence only went to impeach the testimony of Gentry. It is next insisted that the court erred in instructing the jury as follows: “One of the defenses interposed by the defendant is what is known as an alibi; that is, that the defendant was at another place at the time of the commission of the .alleged offense. Here the burden of proof shifts. And the burden of proof is on the defendant to show that he was in another place when the alleged crime was committed, but that is discharged if the proof raises a reasonable doubt in your mind that he was not at the place at the time the crime was committed, but was in some other place. The defendant is not required to prove this defense beyond a reasonable doubt to entitle him to an acquittal; it is sufficient if the evidence upon that point raises a reasonable doubt that he was present at the time of the commission of the crime. “The defense is an affirmative one. If, however, from the evidence in the whole case there is in the minds of the jurors a reasonable doubt as to whether or not the defendant was at the place at the time the offense was committed, then there would be a reasonable doubt of his guilt for the reason that he could not be guilty if he was not there.” Counsel made a specific objection to this language: “Here the burden of proof shifts.” It is first insisted that the judgment should be reversed because the coult refused to eliminate the language just quoted from the instruction when the defendant specifically objected to it. We can not agree with counsel in this contention. It is true that the defense of an alibi forms no exception to the general rule that if a reasonable doubt of guilt arises from the whole testimony the def endant is entitled to its benefit, and that the burden of proof to establish the guilt of the accused never shifts from the State. It is evident, from the connection in which the term “burden of proof” is used in this instruction of the court in the case at bar, that it does not imply that the defendant must prove his defense by a preponderance of the evidence, but only that, after the State has made out its case and established the guilt of the defendant beyond a reasonable doubt, it devolves upon the defendant to introduce evidence to prove his alibi, if he relies upon such a defense. In short, in order to maintain his defense of an alibi, the burden is on him to establish it by such facts and circumstances as will, with all the other evidence in the case, create in the minds of the jury a reasonable doubt of his guilt. We do not think any intelligent jury could have understood the charge of the court in any other sense, when it is considered as a whole. Again it is contended that the instruction is erroneous in using the following language: “It is sufficient if the evidence upon that point (referring to the alibi) raises a reasonable doubt that he was present at the time of the commission of the crime.” We do not think the court should have used this language, but under the circumstances it was not prejudicial to the defendant. A better expression of the law would be, when the jury have considered all the evidence, as well that touching the question of the alibi, as the criminating evidence introduced by the State, then, if they have a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the defendant, they should acquit. In the case at bar the .court, in effect, told the jury that if the evidence introduced by the defendant on the question of alibi was sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt, the jury should acquit. In the same connection the court further told the jury, under the theory that the State must prove the defendant’s guilt, that the State’s evidence and the alibi should be considered by the jury in connection with the rest of the evidence as a part of the whole from which they were to determine whether the guilt of the defendant was established beyond a reasonable doubt. Joiner v. State, 113 Ark. 112, and Hawthorne v. State, 135 Ark. 247. Therefore, the court did not err in giving the instruction. We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment will be affirmed.