Opinion
Opinion delivered June 20, 1932.
1. CRIMINAL LAW — HARMLESS ERROR. — Permitting the State in a murder case to prove that defendant for several years had been engaged in the liquor business, if improper, was harmless where defendant admitted that he had been so engaged. 2. CONSPIRACY — EVIDENCE. — Where there was sufficient evidence from which to infer a conspiracy to kill, evidence that one of the alleged conspirators offered the killer money if he would kill the defendant held competent. 3. HOMICIDE — EVIDENCE. — Where deceased was killed with 45-calibre bullets, it was competent to prove that defendant bought pistol shells of that size about two months before the killing. 4. CRIMINAL LAW — NECESSITY FOR OBJECTION. — The admissibility of testimony admitted without objection will not be considered on appeal. 5. CRIMINAL LAW — REPETITION OF INSTRUCTIONS. — Withdrawal of an instruction which was fully covered by another that was given held not error. 6. CRIMINAL LAW — CORROBORATION OF ACCOMPLICE. — Evidence held to corroborate an accomplice.
Appeal from Randolph Circuit Court; John L. Bledsoe, Judge; affirmed.
E. E. Alexander and Geo. M. Booth, for appellant.
Hal L. Norwood, Attorney General, and Robert F. Smith, Assistant, for appellee.
Appellant was indicted, tried and convicted for murder in the first degree of Manley Jackson, and adjudged to serve a life term in the State penitentiary as a punishment therefor, from which is this appeal.
The first assignment of error for a reversal of the judgment is that the trial court erred in allowing the prosecuting attorney to prove by Lige Dame, a witness for the State, that appellant had been engaged in the liquor business for several years. Even if improper to make this proof, appellant afterwards became a witness in his own behalf and admitted that he had engaged in the liquor business, so he was not prejudiced by the proof of the State in this respect.
The next assignments of error for a reversal of the judgment were the admissions in evidence of statements of witness, Lige Dame, to the effect that John Slayton had promised him $1,000 to kill Manley Jackson and $450 to burn a house, and had protected him in the sale of liquor in Pocahontas for a consideration, all in the absence of, and without the knowledge of, appellant. Objections were made and exceptions saved to the introduction of this evidence.
Such evidence could be admitted only on the theory that Lige Dame, who killed Jackson, was induced and encouraged to do so by John Slayton and appellant, or, to put it differently, that the three were conspirators in the commission of the crime.
Lige Dame testified that he killed Jackson at the instance and request of John Slayton and appellant; that John Slayton and Manley Jackson were opposing candidates for marshal at Pocahontas, and that Friday before the killing on Saturday John Slayton offered him $1,000 to kill Manley Jackson, and that he agreed to do so; that on the next day, Saturday, appellant came and informed him that Manley Jackson was having illicit relations with witness' wife, and advised that he kill him, and offered to help him do so; that, pursuant to the agreement, they induced Manley Jackson to go with them out in the country a short distance before daylight Sunday morning, where witness shot Manley Jackson four or five times in the back, and left him a corpse on the roadside.
The fact that both appellant and John Slayton approached Lige Dame for the same purpose within a few hours of each other and prevailed upon him to kill Manley Jackson tended to show that they conspired together to take his life. There being sufficient evidence from which to infer a conspiracy, the conduct and relationship of the conspirators, one to another, in lawlessness and crime was admissible as a circumstance tending to show the guilt of either in the particular crime charged.
The next assignment of error is that the court erred in allowing the State to show by George Promberger, Jr., and his father that appellant bought No. 45 calibre pistol shells at their hardware store about two months before Manley Jackson was killed. Manley Jackson was killed with bullets of that size, and for that reason the circumstance of the purchase was admissible.
The next assignment of error was the admission of appellant's evidence, taken, in shorthand and transcribed at the coroner's hearing or examining trial, and also in a habeas corpus proceeding on application for bond by John Slayton. It is argued that the admission of this testimony was in plain derogation of 3122 of Crawford Moses' Digest, which is as follows:
"In all cases where two or more persons are jointly or otherwise concerned in the commission of any crime or misdemeanor, either of such persons may be sworn as a witness in relation to such crime or misdemeanor; but the testimony given by such witness shall in no instance be used against him in any criminal prosecution for the same offense."
The introduction of the testimony was not objected to on this specific ground, and no general objection was made to it, so we cannot pass upon the admissibility thereof on appeal.
The next assignment for a reversal of the judgment is that the court withdrew instruction No. 11 from the jury after the case had been submitted. The jury had returned to the court to ask that the instructions be read to them again. In reading the instructions, the court discovered that the subject-matter contained in instruction No. 11 was fully covered by instruction No. 15, which appellant had requested, and therefore withdrew instruction No. 11 from their consideration. We are unable to see where any prejudice resulted to appellant by the withdrawal of one instruction which was fully covered by another.
The last assignment of error for a reversal of the judgment is that the testimony of appellant's admitted accomplice, Lige Dame, is not sufficiently corroborated to sustain the verdict and judgment of conviction.
The rule of evidence is that the corroboration of the testimony of an accomplice is not sufficient if it merely shows the killing and the circumstances thereof, but must connect the defendant with the commission of the crime. There are corroborating circumstances in the testimony tending to connect appellant with the murder of Manley Jackson, as follows:
A short time prior to the killing, appellant was arrested by Manley Jackson in a manner displeasing to him. In making the arrest, Jackson drew a pistol on him, and he stated in a heated argument with him that he had better never do that again.
Appellant purchased, about two months before the killing, cartridges the same size that were used in killing Manley Jackson.
There is testimony in the record tending to show that appellant told of the killing before it was known in Pocahontas.
During the investigation of the killing by W. A. Jackson, father of deceased, appellant said to Joe Alphin, "Now listen; if you know anything, you had better keep your damn mouth shut."
Immediately after the investigation, just after appellant had been interrogated concerning his knowledge of the crime, he said to Frank Jankersfeldt, "The sons of b______! Trying to find out something, and I am not talking."
No error appearing, the judgment is affirmed.