Hanners v. State

The court did not err in refusing to allow the defendant to show by the witness Lowery that the defendant secured the witness to go and telephone the sheriff and notify him of the location of the still. This would have been a self-serving declaration on the part of defendant, and as such was not admissible. The cases cited by appellant are not in point. The same is true as to other testimony offered, to the same effect as above. The issue here was: Did the defendant manufacture liquor? And evidence as to what he said and did after the offense was committed was irrelevant, unless they should be as to acts or declarations against interest. In the cases cited by appellant the evidence was permitted to go to the jury in explanation of defendant's acts, which, unexplained, would have been circumstances to be weighed against him, and therefore in those cases the testimony was relevant.

The fact that Henry Lowery was in the woods with defendant the evening before the raid was immaterial and irrelevant, and had no tendency to prove an alibi. The fact that defendant's white felt hat was found by the officers at or near the still would tend to show that defendant had been at the still at some time prior to the time the officers came, but at what time is not shown, and the statement that Henry Lowery had been with defendant in the evening over there in the woods watching the still, and was there at the time the raid was made, was entirely too indefinite as to time, as tending to prove an alibi for defendant in this case.

We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.