Huguley v. State
Huguley v. State
Opinion of the Court
“But the defendant cannot justly complain of mere informalities which do not in any way affect the number, or personnel, or character of the veniremen provided for his selection of jury men.” — Waldrop v. State, 185 Ala. 20, 24, 64 South. 80, 81.
We think the order of the court shows a compliance with the provisions of the statute in respect to drawing the special venire. It is stated in the order that the judge of the court ordered the jury box of the county to be brought into open court, and that he drew the names of the special jurors from the jury box in open court. There is no requirement in the present jury law that the jury box shall be “shaken,” or that the names be “publicly” drawn, but that they be drawn in open court. This the judgment entry shows to have been done, and we think it affirmatively appears that the special jurors were drawn as required by law. — Acts 1909, p. 305 et seq. But, however this may be, the defect of which the defendant complains is one which may be waived by the defendant failing to interpose timely and appropriate objection (Waldrop v. State, supra; Moton v. State, 13 Ala. 43, 69 South. 235), and the record in this case does not disclose that objection in any form was made to the action of the trial court in drawing the jury. See, also, Thomas v. State, 94 Ala. 74, 10 South. 432, where it is said: “Parties must not be permitted to speculate on the chances of a favorable verdict, and, failing, then fall back on some preliminary, ministerial error, not previously called to the attention of the court.”
“When a question of fact is involved, dependent on oral testimony, the credibility of the evidence must be referred 'to the jury; and a charge assuming the credibility of the testimony, is erroneous, though it is clear and undisputed.” — Davidson v. State, 63 Ala. 432; quoted approvingly by this court in Thomas v. Smoot, 2 Ala. App. 407, 409, 56 South. 1.
Likewise it is held that trial courts cannot be required to give charges that there is, or is not, evidence of particular facts.— Troup v. State, 160 Ala. 125, 49 South. 332; New Connellsville Co. v. Kilgore, 162 Ala. 644, 50 South. 205; Jefferson v. State, 110 Ala. 89, 92, 20 South. 434. Nor do we think the evidence justified the court in charging as a matter of law that the defendant was standing, at the time he fired the fatal shots, within the curtilage of his business house, and was therefore under no duty to retreat. Under the evidence, it appeared that the storehouse of the defendant near where the killing occurred was near the forks of the roads; that for two years or more before the fatal difficulty people generally were in the habit of using the place where the difficulty took place as a passageway in cutting across going from one road to another. Some of the witnesses in behalf of the defendant, it is true, testified in effect that the space in front of and to the side of the store where the difficulty occurred was only used for the purpose of persons and teams going to the rear part of the store. There was evidence also that this space was part of the lot belonging to the owner of the store, to which the defendant, who rented the store, was entitled to the exclusive possession. The space in question, which is claimed by the defendant as a haven of protection affording him the special privilege pertaining to a man in his own habitation, or store, or within the curtilage thereof, which would relieve him from the duty of retreat and permit him to stand his ground when attacked and kill his assailant, even though an avoidance of the difficulty was open to him by retreat with safety to himself, is shown by the evidence to be open, uninclosed ground adjacent to a crossroads store, which, for a space of two years, by consent of all parties, had been constantly and generally used by the public as a passage or roadway for travel. The nature *193 of the surroundings and location and the business in which the defendant was engaged were such that an implied invitation was given to the public to use this space. It seems from the evidence that they did so. Because the defendant had the right to the exclusive possession of this land, without more, is not enough to bring him within the principle of inviolability. attaching to one within his curtilage that relieves him from the duty of retreat.— Thomas v. State, 13 Ala. App. 50, 69 South. 315; McGhee v. State, 178 Ala. 4, 59 South. 573; Lee v. State, 92 Ala. 15, 9 South. 407, 25 Am. St. Rep. 17. There was evidence introduced in behalf of the state that tended to show that the defendant was standing on “the edge” of the public road at the time that he fired the first shot, and that the deceased was at that time approaching him with both hands extended in front of him, and that he had no weapon in his hands. The legal effect of giving the charges requested by the defendant' assuming that the defendant was within the curtilage of his store and under no duty to retreat, under this phase of the evidence, would be an invasion of the province of the jury. We do not think, considering the evidence as a whole, that the court could correctly charge as a matter of law that the open space in question was within the curtilage. — Perry v. State, 94 Ala. 25, 10 South. 650. It was, at most, of that indeterminate character that made it a question for the jury. — Cook v. State, 83 Ala. 62, 3 South. 849, 3 Am. St. Rep. 688.
The rulings on the evidence to which exceptions were reserved are not insisted upon in brief of defendant’s counsel as showing-reversible error. We have examined these rulings and the entire record, and find-no error requiring reversal of the case.
Affirmed.
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