Court Opinion

ID: 3236157
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:10:41.699856+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:52:24.860052
License: Public Domain

The state's petition for certiorari to the Court of Appeals to revise its action in reversing the judgment of conviction of Walter White (appellant there) of manslaughter in the first degree because of the trial court's refusal of White's request for this special instruction:
"I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that if you find from the evidence in this case that the defendant was going quietly down the road and was free from fault in bringing on the difficulty, and if the Hortons and Casey cut off his way of escape and opened fire on him, then he had the right to fire in self-defense."
Aside from the omission of this request for instruction to efficiently hypothesize the imminence of defendant's real or apparent peril at the time he fired, the request was faulty, justifying its refusal, in the respect that the elements of self-defense were not defined therein. Miller v. State,107 Ala. 40, 46, 58, 19 So. 37; Hendley v. State, 200 Ala. 546,549, 76 So. 904. The doctrine of the cases cited was properly applied by the Court of Appeals in Lawman's Case,18 Ala. App. 569, 93 So. 69, 72, 73, and also in Windom's Case,18 Ala. App. 430, 93 So. 79, 82, treating request 10, refused to that defendant. The trial court's refusal to this defendant of the quoted request not being *Page 9 
error, reversal of the judgment of conviction on that account was erroneous.
The writ of certiorari is granted; the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and MILLER, JJ., concur.
SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., dissent.
THOMAS, J., not sitting.