Fuqua v. State

de GRAFFENRIED, J.

The defendant was indicted for murder in the first degree, and was convicted of *49murder in the second degree and sentenced to the penitentiary.

It appears from the bill of exceptions that one Bhoda Shoulders, at a previous trial of the case, had testified as a witness for the state. This witness was not present during the trial at which the defendant was convicted, and during the progress of the trial the solicitor asked one Owens, while on the stand, if he knew where said Blhoda was. The witness replied “that he did not know where Blhoda Shoulders was; that he heard she was out of the state; that he did not know for certain; that he could not find her.” The solicitor then remarked that “it does not malee any difference; the defendant admits that she is out of the state”; to which one of the defendant’s attorneys replied: “We admit that she is out of the state.” All this occurred in open court during the progress of the trial, in the presence of the court and jury, and while a witness in the case was being examined by the solicitor in behalf of the state. The court therefore committed no error in admitting secondary evidence of the testimony of the witness Bhoda given on the former trial.

The solicitor thereupon placed uon the stand, as a witness to prove the said testimony of said Bhoda, the official court stenographer, who testified that he was present at the trial at which said Bhoda testified; that he took down her testimony in shorthand, and had his stenographic notes, from which he could read her testimony, but that he had never transcribed her testimony from the stenographic notes, and had no transcript of her testimony. Thereupon the defendant objected to the reading by said witness of the testimony of said Bhoda from said notes as evidence in the case. The court overruled the objection, and stated that if the court came to the conclusion that such witness was *50incompetent it would exclude his evidence from the jury. The witness then proceeded in narrative form to read, from his stenographic notes, the evidence of said Rhoda. Before the witness had concluded said reading, the court interrupted the witness, and had said witness to stand aside, and excluded from the jury all of the evidence of said witness. Thereupon the solicitor introduced as a witness one Owens, who testified that he was present at the trial in which said Rhoda testified, and heard her testify. The solicitor then asked the witness to state his recollection of Rhoda’s testimony. The defendant objected to this question, on the ground that there had not been a proper predicate laid for the introduction of the testimony of said Rhoda, and on the further ground that the stenographic notes of her testimony is the highest and best evidence of her testimony. The court overruled the objection and the defendant excepted.

The court committed no error, of which the defendant had the right to complain, in excluding from the jury the evidence of the stenographic reporter. That evidence was admitted against the defendants objection, and, as it was evidence to the admission of which the defendant objected, he cannot be heard afterwards to complain of its exclusion from the jury. It is also manifest that the court committed no error in admitting evidence of the testimony of the witness Rhoda on the former trial by a witness who heard her testify. By am admission made by counsel representing the defendant, made in open court during the trial, the witness was shown to be absent from, the state. ' The • court, on objection of the defendant, had excludded the evidence of the stenographer, by whom the state proposed'to have her testimony read from his stenographic notes. The witness Owens was certainly competent to testify to his *51recollection of her testimony on the previous trial.—Burton v. State, 115 Ala. 1, 22 South. 585.

Neither did the court commit error in sustaining the objection of the state to the question propounded by the defendant to the witness Nance. The defendant had repeatedly asked this witness this same question, and the witness had repeatedly answered the question. As the question was merely a repetition of' a question which had previously been- asked and answered, the court properly sustained the solicitor’s objection to the question when last asked.—Evans v. State, 109 Ala. 11, 19 South. 535; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Merrill, 144 Ala. 618, 39 South. 121, 113 Am. St. Rep. 66.

In prosecutions for murder, it is always permissible for the state to prove that the defendant entertained feelings of. hostility toward the deceased, and for this purpose the fact, but not details, of recent former difficulties between defendant and deceased, and recent threats made by defendant against deceased, may be shown. In the present case the state proved a former difficulty between defendant and deceased, and asked the witness by whom the difficulty was shown, referring to the time of such difficulty, or immediately thereafter, the following question: “After the difficulty,, did you hear Hateras say anything about what he was going, to do in regard to killing a man?” The defendant objected to. the question and answer, upon the ground that the question was not limited to killing Leonard Fuqua. The court overruled the objection,. and the defendant excepted, and the witness replied “that the defendant just said there was a man out that he had to kill if he did not quit bothering him; that that was after the ‘fuss’ with the dead man, and there was no one present but himself, the defendant, and the deceased.” As we understand, the .defendant, .he objected,, to the question *52because the question should have been asked specifically about killing the deceased, hy name, and not in regard to killing a man generally, and that the answer was not relevant because the defendant did not say that he intended to kill deceased (though he may have meant deceased), but said that he intended to kill á man. We do not agree with the defendant in this contention. It was for the jury to say, taking into consideration the time when and the place where the defendant made the alleged statement, whether or not the deceased was meant when the defendant said he intended to- “kill a man'.” The defendant did not object to- the question, because the court did not instruct the jury that they •should not consider it as testimony, unless the word “man,” as used in the alleged threat, meant “the deceased,” but because the question, although referable to the time of a difficulty between deceased and defendant, and referable to the deceased, did not, by its own express terms, limit the inquiry to deceased by naming him in the question. It is therefore evident that the court committed no error in permitting the witness to answer the question.

The evidence in this case tends to show that the defendant and deceased, were first cousins, and that they ■slept together in the same bed. It further tends to show that they were daily companions, and that they were constantly engaged with each other in the same labor. On the day of the homicide, and immediately preceding it, they came together out of the field to Rhoda Shoulders, evidently an elderly woman, with whom they evidently lived. One asked her for a chew of tobacco, and the other for some snuff). Shortly afterwards she heard a pistol fire in -the room in which said parties slept, and she then saw defendant sitting in a window, and the deceased near him, falling to the floor, and she ran *53and knew nothing more. The defendant, claims that the killing was accidental; the state claims that it was intentionally done. There was evidence tending to uphold both theories. The jury has determined the issues of fact in favor-of the state. The court committed no error of law on the defendant’s trial, and we have.no authority to review or disturb the findings of a jury on controverted issues of fact.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Affirmed.