1. The relevancy of that part of the evidence of the widow of the deceased tending to show that prior to her marriage to the deceased the defendant, then an unmarried man, had asked her hand in marriage, and that at the time of such refusal the defendant said that “whoever she married- would do her no good,” is seriously challenged by counsel for defendant in their brief. The relevancy of evidence is *24for the court. Its weight, if any it possesses, is, ordinarily, for the jury, and the jury alone. ‘“When the offense is against the person or property, the relations existing between the accused and the injured, person prior to and at the time of the injury, in conjunction with other circumstances, may disclose a motive either of gain or revenge on the part of the accused which will aid in identifying him as the wrongdoer.”—Hudson v. State, 61 Ala. 333. “They are resorted to as elements of evidence, not from any supposed necessity of accounting for or explaining the reason of a criminal act which has been clearly proved and fixed upon the accused, however strange and inexplicable such act itself may appear, but from the important aid they always render in completing the proof of the commission of such act by the party charged in cases where it might otherwise be in doubt.” — Burrill on Circumstantial Evidence, p. 296; Hudson v. State, supra. “The force of the fact time may diminish, but does not entirely destroy. Or if new and amicable relations have been formed — or any other change of circumstances which may diminish the probative force of the fact can he shown — the fact must be taken in connection with these, and it may be shorn of all practical value as evidence without affecting its admissibility.” — Hudson v. State, supra. While the Supreme Court in the above opinion was dealing with a case in which the defendant had been convicted by the jury of arson upon circumstantial evidence, and the question was whether certain ancient difficulties between the defendant and the owner of the property burned were relevant as tending to establish a motive on the part of the defendant for committing the crime, the quoted language is controlling upon the question now before us. In the instant case the defendant was indicted for murder in the second *25degree. One of the questions, therefore, before the jury, was whether the defendant had a motive for killing.the deceased. The defendant admitted the killing, but claimed that he acted in self-defense. The state, on the other hand, claimed that the killing was done unlawfully and maliciously. The question, therefore, as to whether the defendant, in the instant case, had a motive for the commission of the offense, is governed by the identical rules declared by the Supreme Court in the above case of Hudson v. State, Avhich since its rendition has been frequently cited and quoted with approval.—Gray v. State, 63 Ala. 73; Long v. State, 96 Ala. 43, 5 South. 443; Spraggins v. State, 139 Ala. 103, 35 South. 1000; Walker v. State, 85 Ala. 7, 4 South. 686, 7 Am. St. Rep. 17. In the instant case the deceased came within the direct scope of the alleged threat, for he married the woman by whom thé defendant was refused in marriage, and the defendant killed the deceased. While the marriage of the defendant to another woman three years before the homicide — a woman with whom he was living as his wife at the time of the homicide — and while the deceased had been married to the woman to whom the alleged threat was made for five months before the homicide, in short, while all the facts and circumstances surrounding the defendant at the time of the homicide may have “shorn this evidence of all practical value as evidence,” its admissibility was not, under the rules laid down by the Supreme Court in the above case of Hudson v. State, thereby affected.—Walker v. State, supra.
2. The evidence both for the state and for the defendant tended to show that the deceased was shot by the defendant while in the defendant’s yard. The evidence further tended to show that the deceased went into the defendant’s premises in an unusual way — by climbing *26over his fence — and at an unusual time — between 9 and 10 o’clock at night — and that he acted in a boisterous and indecent manner from the time he went on the defendant’s premises until he was killed. All the evidence tended to show that the deceased was drinking at the time, and there was some evidence tending to show that his drunken condition must have been so apparent that the defendant must have known that the behavior of the deceased was due entirely to his drunken condition, and that he was in a state of mental imbecility on account of such drunken condition. We are therefore of the opinion that the court committed no error in permitting testimony tending to show that 30 minutes before the homicide the deceased was “drunk asleep” on a railroad near defendant’s house.—White v. State, 103 Ala. 72, 16 South. 63.
3. Taken in connection with the other parts of the oral charge of the court .which were not excepted to, the - court committed no error in charging the jury, under the evidence as disclosed by this record, orally as follows : “And it matters not how opprobrious these words are, and how the deceased cursed. The fact in itself, whilst he might have struck him down with his hand, in no conditions would those things alone justify the taking of human life. They reduce the grade of the offense to murder in the second degree, the crime for which this man is indicted.”
In the quoted portion of the oral charge of the court, the court simply told the jury that under the law mere words, however offensive, cannot reduce a homicide provoked by such words alone to manslaughter, but that a homicide committed in the heat of blood provoked by mere opprobrious words alone is at the least murder in the second degree. Such is the law of this state.—Compton v. State, 110 Ala. 24, 20 South. 119.
*27It appears from the evidence in this case that there Avas a preliminary trial, and that on that trial the evidence of the Avitnesses was taken doAvn in the form of depositions, and that each Avitness signed his deposition Avhen so taken. The defendant Avas examined as a Avitness on that trial, his deposition was subscribed by him, and said deposition Avas introduced as evidence for the purposes of contradiction. The said deposition shows that on the preliminary trial the defendant testified, among other things, as follows: “I was about four feet from the gate when the shot was fired. He Avas advancing toAvards me. His hand was up in a position like he wanted to hit me. His hands were not on the gate posts. He Avas just inside the gate. At the time I shot him he had his right arm up, and I couldn’t tell what he had in his left.” On the final trial the defendant testified, among other things, as follows: “I don’t think that I testified on the preliminary ‘like he was going to hit me.’ I have no recollection of saying ‘hit me.’ I tried to say he had his hand like he was going to get his pistol. I don’t recollect saying that his hand was up in a position like he was going to hit me Avhen I shot him. No, sir; I don’t think that I testified on the preliminary that Fate James had his right arm up, but I couldn’t tell Avhat he had in his left.” In view of the above conflict Avhich existed between the testimony of the defendant Avhich the evidence tended to show he gave on his preliminary trial and his testimony on the final trial, we do not think that the defendant’s objections to sub-divisions 2 and 3 of the oral charge of the court Avere well taken. It appears that during his oral charge the trial judge stated to the jury the following, to which the defendant reserved an exception as subdivision 2: “If this man [the deceased] approached this man [the defendant] there at the time with his fist up *28to strike him and he shot him, it is your sworn duty to convict kirn. A blow from the hand never, under ordinary circumstances, justifies the use' of a deadly weapon.” After the defendant had objected to this quoted portion of the court’s charge, the court further said to the jury as follows: “You may have misunderstood me, gentlemen, in that part of the charge which I charged you if he approached the defendant, as contended by the state in this deposition, with his hand to strike him, that you must find him guilty if that is true. I mean with an open hand, free from any weapon.” The defendant excepted to this portion of the court’s oral charge as subdivision No. 3. The oral charge of the court must be construed as a whole. Each of its sentences is intended to be considered as forming a part of the charge in its entirety, and no sentence is intended to be considered as disassociated from the other parts of the charge. When an oral charge is so considered and construed, if it correctly states the law as applied to the facts of the case, no one can complain because some sentence by itself may be subject to criticism.— Williams v. State, 83 Ala. 68, 3 South. 743. There is nothing in the objections taken by the defendent to the above-quoted portions of the oral charge of the court, when those portions of the charge are considered in connection with the rest of the oral charge of the court and in connection with the evidence in the case.
4. Charge 2 requested by the defendant in writing was covered by charges “a,” “c,” and “d” given to the jury at the written request of the defendant.
5. The defendant undertook, in making his defense, to show that he shot the deceased while trying to get him, while in an excited condition due to the influence of liquor, out of his (defendant’s) house and yard, and that the shooting took place while the defendant was *29within the curtilage of his dwelling, and in defense of himself from a sudden unprovoked and apparently dangerous assault at the hands of the deceased. All of the evidence showed that the defendant fired the fatal shot while within the curtilage of his dwelling. Pretermitting the question as to whether charge 3, which the defendant requested the court in writing to give to the jury, was not properly refused upon other grounds (See Finch v. State, 81 Ala. 41, 1 South. 565, and Shepherd’s Case, 135 Ala. 9, 33 South. 266), charge “d,” given to •the jury by the court at the written request of the defendant, placed the doctrine of retreat in its most favorable aspect under all of the facts of the case before the jury, and the court therefore committed no error of which the defendant can complain in refusing to give said charge 3 to the jury.
6. Charge 4 requested in writing by the defendant, which the court refused to give to the jury, was patently bad and was properly refused.
We have carefully considered all the questions presented by this record. It appears to us that the defendant received an impartial trial, and that the trial court in the conduct of the trial committed no error. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.