On the trial of the cause the defendant moved the court to quash the venire from which a jury was to be selected to try his case on the ground that the court had no authority to draw additional jurors, in addition to juries numbered 1 and 2, and three jurors on jury numbered 3, which the court did, confining the jurors so drawn to those living within five miles of the county seat. On the hearing of the motion, the following facts were agreed to:
"It was admitted that on Monday, immediately after the calling of the case and after the state had announced ready for trial, and defendant had been given time to prepare a showing for absent witnesses, the court having organized the petit jury, and there being 25 jurors present, the court directed the sheriff to bring into the courtroom the jury box and drew from the jury box the names of more than 18 jurors among others, and selected from such names 18 jurors who resided within five miles of the courthouse, and directed that they be summoned for attendance upon the court, and that on Tuesday before this case was called for trial the court had examined said jurors as to their qualification as jurors generally without reference to this case in particular, and had them sworn for the week, and these jurors were in attendance on the court at the time this case was called. No inquiry had been previously made as to the qualification of any jurors as to this particular case. The court here stated that it was the object and purpose of the court in drawing the special jurors on yesterday evening to obtain three full panels so that the time of the court might not be delayed in the trial of causes upon the docket for the then present week; that, if objection is made by the defendant, the names of these gentlemen drawn on yesterday evening will not be placed upon the panels or placed upon them as jurors.
"Thereupon counsel for the defendant stated that they reserved an exception to the ruling of the court requiring them to make an election or rejection or accepting jurors thus summoned.
"Thereupon the court overruled the defendant's motion to quash the venire, and to this ruling of the court the defendant then and there duly excepted, and the defendant was furnished with a list containing the jurors who were thus drawn by the court from this list. The defendant and the state alternately struck as provided by law until the jury was selected and duly impaneled, and thereupon the trial proceeded."
There are at least two reasons why the appellant's contentions are not tenable:
(1) Section 29 of the act of the Legislature (Acts 1909, p. 317) provides:
"Sec. 29. It is hereby expressly declared to be the intent of the Legislature in the enactment of this law, to make the provisions hereof in the relation to the selection, drawing, summoning or empaneling of jurors directory merely and not mandatory. The jurors selected, drawn, summoned and impaneled under the provisions of this act, whether at or earlier, or later day than required by this act, must and shall in all respects be deemed legal, and to possess in full, in every respect, power to perform all of the duties belonging to grand and petit jurors. And no objection can be taken to any venire of jurors, except for fraud in drawing or summoning the jurors."
(2) It does not appear that the defendant suffered any injury by reason of the action of the court.
The defendant introduced as a witness in his behalf Ake Vaughn, the father of the defendant, the state offered testimony tending to impeach this witness, and in rebuttal defendant offered testimony as to the good character of the witness for truth and veracity. On cross-examination of these character witnesses, the state, over the objection of the defendant, was allowed to prove that they had heard that on various occasions the witness had drank whisky, been drunk, or had played cards. On a former appeal of this case our Supreme Court said:
"The defendant introduced a number of witnesses who testified to the good character of defendant and his father; the latter having also testified in the cause. Upon cross-examination of these witnesses the state was permitted to ask if they had not heard of the defendant and his father being drunk and gambling with cards. We are of the opinion that in this there was no reversible error." Vaughan v. State, 201 Ala. 472, 475,78 So. 378, 381.
This ruling was based upon a line of authorities there cited, holding, in effect, that where a witness has testified in chief to the good character of the defendant, he may be asked on cross-examination whether or not he has heard of certain offenses specifying them, charged against the defendant before the then pending prosecution, inconsistent with the character he is called to prove. It will be noted that in the former appeal the inquiry was as to the general character of the witness and defendant, while in the present appeal the inquiry is limited to general character for truth and veracity. The rule as laid down by Underhill on Criminal Evidence (2d Ed.) § 82, is as follows:
"A witness to good character may be asked on cross-examination to test his credibility *Page 386 whether, he heard rumors of particular and specific charges of the commission of acts inconsistent with the character he is called to prove."
This rule was approved in White v. State, 111 Ala. 92,21 So. 330 and in dealing with the question it is said in 1 Greenl. on Ev. (16th Ed.) p. 580, subd. (c):
"There may be, first, a limitation as to relevancy. Not all misconduct indicates a bad character, and not all evil deeds indicate a lack of the truth telling disposition. On principle, only such misconduct as exposes a lack of veraciousness or honesty should be inquired after."
This principle has been recognized by our Supreme Court in Crawford v. State, 112 Ala. 1, 21 So. 214; Motes v. Bates,80 Ala. 387; Rhea v. State, 100 Ala. 119, 14 So. 853; Evans v. State, 109 Ala. 11, 19 So. 535; Ex parte Lewis, 13 Ala. App. 31,68 So. 792; Huckabaa v. State, 4 Ala. App. 68,58 So. 684; Coates v. State, 5 Ala. App. 182, 59 So. 323; Swope v. State, 12 Ala. App. 297, 68 So. 562; Terry v. State, 15 Ala. App. 665, 74 So. 756. While the holding on the former appeal may have the effect of extending the rule as to general character, so that general character may be affected by drinking whisky or playing cards, that holding does not control the present appeal, applying, as the question here does, to character for veracity, and this court is not prepared to hold that drinking and playing cards renders a witness less apt to testify truthfully. The court erred in its several rulings on the evidence in conflict with the rule as herein stated.
There is another point of difference between the question as here presented and as presented on former appeal. Here it is only Ake Vaughn, a witness, and there it was both a witness and the defendant.
As to those questions asked some of defendant's witnesses on cross-examination if they and the Vaughns (defendant and father) did not drink together, the Supreme Court has passed upon. Under the statute, we have no power to change the ruling there made, and we ought not to, and do not, therefore, express our opinion, but attention is called to the opinion in the case of Moulton v. State, 88 Ala. 116, 6 So. 758, 6 L.R.A. 301.
It was not proper to allow the witness Tince Lecroy to testify that Ake Vaughn, the father of defendant, had never stated to witness that "he hated it" (meaning the killing). So far as is shown by the evidence, there had no occasion arisen where it was incumbent on the witness to say anything in order to avoid an admission. And certainly the fact that Ake Vaughn had not told this witness that "he hated it" could not shed any light on the guilt or innocence of the defendant or tend to impeach the testimony of Ake Vaughn.
Whether Stephens, the deceased, was mad with Lon Wallace, a state's witness, at another time and place than that of the killing, while irrelevant, was not prejudicial.
The questions asked the witness Lon Wallace with reference to his signing a certain paper prepared by counsel representing the state were permissible for the purpose of refreshing the recollection of the witness.
The testimony as to the drinking of whisky and playing cards by the defendant and certain of the witnesses has already been passed upon by the Supreme Court on former appeal. Vaughan v. State, supra.
The court, over defendant's objection and exception first requested and then compelled the defendant's counsel in open court and in the presence of the jury to deliver to the state's counsel a typewritten translation of the evidence and testimony taken in shorthand on a former trial of this case made for the defendant by the court reporter and paid for by the defendant, the transcript to be treated as certified by the official stenographer, the transcript containing the testimony of a state's witness then dead, and the stenographer's notes not being available as evidence. Section 7 of the act of the Legislature of 1909 (Acts 1909, p. 263) provides that:
"All transcripts furnished by said official stenographer shall be certified to by him over his signature, and when so certified, such transcript shall be prima facie evidence of the proceedings in said cause."
It is clear, therefore, that being prima facie evidence of the proceedings on a former trial, and being then in court, the court had the power, yea, it was his duty, to admit and require any part of the transcript relevant to the issues then being tried to be produced and introduced as evidence. This ruling is not in conflict with section 5 of the Constitution of 1901, providing against unreasonable seizures and searches, but is a reasonable rule in aid of the due administration of justice. Neither does it infringe upon the rule which prohibits the courts from forcing a defendant to give evidence against himself. Defendant's counsel might have been called to testify as to what was testified to on a former trial. Nor is the transcript a private document within the meaning of the law that will not compel a defendant to deliver documents that will incriminate him, and the case of Cooper v. State, 86 Ala. 610,6 So. 110, 4 L.R.A. 766, 11 Am. St. Rep. 84, and other cases of like tenor, are not in point. For the foregoing purposes, and to that extent, the court had the power and control over the transcript. Wigmore, Ev. § 1669. It could not be called for on other terms. 1 Thomp. Trials, § 829; Lawrence v. Van Horne, 1 Cai. Cas. 285. The ruling of the court on this question was as follows:
"Gentlemen, the way the court feels about this matter, and probably the way the jury feels *Page 387 about the matter, is that they want to know the true facts in this case. The testimony was taken by a sworn officer of the court in shorthand. The notes are not present and not accessible at this time to the court. There is a certified copy of the record which had been used in the trial in court. One of the witnesses who was examined at a former time is now dead. The state seeks to introduce the testimony of this witness which is contained in this record. The court is of the opinion, and will so rule, that the defendant be required to allow the state the use of that record for the purpose of introducing that testimony, provided, of course, that it is relevant to the issue in this case."
This ruling was in line with the foregoing and was without error. The court did not err in refusing to permit defendant's counsel to inquire into the details of former transactions and former relations between witness for the state and witnesses for defendant.
There are many rulings of the court as to the admission of testimony, many of which are clearly without error, and all of them are of so elementary a nature that we deem it unnecessary to extend this opinion by a seriatim discussion of them.
Refused charge numbered 12, which will be set out by the reporter, is illustrative of charges 1, 3, 4, 5, 27, 28, 30, 35, 44, 62, and 63. In order for a defendant to be allowed to invoke the doctrine of self-defense, he must be free from fault in provoking the difficulty, and if by word or deed he voluntarily contributed to the bringing on of the difficulty, he cannot invoke the doctrine. Mitchell v. State, 129 Ala. 23 (Fourteenth headnote), 30 So. 348. The charge was properly refused.
Refused charge 2, which will be set out by the reporter, is illustrative of charges 8, 10, 22, 23, 29, 31, 32, and 33. This charge ignores the doctrine of "freedom from fault," and, besides, the court in its oral charge fully covered the right of the defendant to protect himself from an attack. The charge was properly refused.
Refused charge 6, which will also be set out by the reporter, is illustrative of charges 11, 51, and 53. The doctrine of retreat is well settled in this state. The duty to retreat arises when it appears necessary to do so in order to prevent the taking of human life, and it can be done without an apparent increase of peril to the life or limb of the party assailed. The charge asserts a contrary rule and was properly refused.
Charge 7 was an argument, and the principles set out in charge 34 were fully and fairly covered in the general charge of the court. Besides, charges similar to charge 34 have been held to be bad, as assuming that the defendant was a reasonable man.
Charges 13, 40, 50, and 59, defining a reasonable doubt, while not covered in hæc verba by the given charges or by the oral charge of the court, were in effect covered thoroughly. Charges of this character are for the sole purpose of giving to the jury a clear definition of a reasonable doubt. When this has been done by the oral charge of the court, and in written charges, the court will not be reversed for refusing to give charges that are merely cumulative and which frequently tend to confuse rather than to make more clear.
The other charges refused to the defendant were upon the effect of the evidence or hypothesized upon evidence brought out in the trial, and will not probably arise or become material on another trial, and hence are not passed upon.
For the error pointed out, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.