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THOMAS, J.- The defendant was found guilty under count 3 of the indictment, which the reporter will set out, and which was good count, the indictment being predicated on section 7675 of the Code of 1907.
Whether, therefore, the other two counts, 1 and 2, were sufficiently specific in their allegations to prevail against the demurrer, we need not and do not consider; since if the court was in error in overruling the demurrer to these counts it was error without injury, as the defendant was, as stated, convicted under the said third count.
In support of the count there was evidence tending to show that the defendant threw a bottle, as alleged in the count, into a passing train, which struck the engi
*195 neer, Kennedy, while in his cab, inflicting serious injuries; that the engineer did not himself know what kind of a missile it was with which he was struck, as it did not fall in the cab, but rebounded to the ground after it struck him; and that at the next stop, Borden Springs, he got off for treatment, and surrendered there the engine to another engineer.The defendant was allowed without objection to prove by one of his witnesses that when the engineer disembarked at the station mentioned he, in reply then to a question there propounded by some one, answered that he had been hit on the shoulder with a rock. Immediately following this statement of the witness the bill of exceptions contains this recital: “Thereupon defendant’s counsel asked the witness this question: Q. Did he exhibit the rock? A. No, sir; the negro fireman had a rock, and said it was what he was hit with. Q. Was Mr. Kennedy [the engineer] present when the negro fireman said it was the rock he was hit with? A. Yes, sir.”
The court ruled out, on motion of the solicitor, this evidence as to what the negro fireman said and did, Avliich action of the court was not improper. Such evidence was certainly not competent, either for the purpose of showing that the engineer ivas in fact hit with a rock, as the fireman’s statement to this effect at the time and not made under oath Avas pure hearsay on this trial, or for the purpose of impeaching the fireman, as the fireman had not then, nor even afterwards, been introduced as a Avitness by the state. If it may be said, which Ave need not decide, that it tended negatively to impeach the engineer himself, in that he failed to deny the statement of the fireman, made in his presence, to the effect that he, the engineer, had been hit with a rock, it may be answered that the testimony of the witness
*196 bad' already shown, if believed, and which went in and remained in without objection, that the engineer had positively impeached himself by affirmatively stating at that time, in reply to a direct question from some one, that he had been hit with a rock. However viewed, therefore, the action of the court in the particular mentioned constitutes no cause for reversal.The three other rulings of the court on evidence, made the basis of several exceptions, are deeméd by counsel of such little importance as to have called forth no brief from them, and as they are so clearly free from error upon principles and precedents long settled and often discussed, it could serve no valuable purpose to prolong this opinion by discussing them here. There were no written charges refused, and none, therefore, presented for review.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Document Info
Citation Numbers: 12 Ala. App. 193, 67 So. 737, 1915 Ala. App. LEXIS 148
Judges: Thomas
Filed Date: 2/4/1915
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024