Bell v. State
Bell v. State
Opinion
James Kelly Bell was indicted for the attempted murder of Ricky Gibb in violation of Alabama Code 1975, §
Despite its alteration, the shirt was properly admitted into evidence because it tended to show the character, location and nature of the wounds. Berard v. State,
"`The determination of whether there has been a change, so substantial or material, in an article or object, that it should not be admitted rests largely in the discretion of the trial court, and it is not necessary that the article be identically the same as at the time in controversy.'" Farris v.State,
Initially, we note that this alleged error has not been preserved for review. Outside of the jury's presence and before the State's rebuttal witness had finished testifying, the trial judge informed counsel, "I'm denying the charges." Twenty of the defendant's written requested charges were denied. Defense counsel responded, "We except to each and every one of them he has denied." At the end of the court's oral charge, defense counsel announced, "We have already recorded our exceptions, Your Honor."
This is far from the type of objection necessary to preserve error. Ex parte Allen,
More significantly, however, the requested charge was properly refused because there is simply no reasonable theory from the evidence to authorize a conviction for assault in the third degree. Mrs. Carol Gibb testified that four men attacked her and her husband, Ricky Gibb, and that the defendant stabbed her husband twice in the back with a knife. Gibb's injuries were very serious and could have caused death.
The defendant testified that he saw a confrontation between Mr. Gibb and his companion Byron Hail. The first thing he saw was Gibb hitting Hail over the head with an umbrella. The defendant testified that he ran up to the two men, "reached up and tried to snatch the umbrella, but by that time he [Gibb] was falling back." The defendant testified that he never hit Gibb and did not remember touching him, but was trying to snatch the umbrella out of Gibb's hands. *Page 624
Under these circumstances, there was simply no reasonable theory to support a conviction for third degree assault, because there is no evidence that the defendant only intended to cause the victim any physical injury. For assault in the third degree, the defendant's intent can only be to cause physical injury, not serious physical injury. Alabama Code 1975, §
"DEFENDANT'S THEORY OF THE CASE
"It is the Defendant's, James Kelley Bell, theory of the case that Byron [Hail] was the individual who stabbed the victim, Ricky Gibb, and he did so without the prior knowledge or consent of this Defendant."
Again we note, for the same reasons articulated in Issue II, that this issue has not been preserved for review.
"[T]he court has the right to state to the jury the general tendencies of the evidence, or the theories of the defense and of the prosecution." White v. State,
Here, the requested charge was properly refused because it did not state that the theory was based on evidence. "An instruction which fails to state that the different theories are based on evidence is improper." 23A C.J.S. Criminal Law § 1190 (1961), citing Sanford v. State,
Defense counsel made "an exception as to complicity since they didn't ask for instructions as to complicity."
On appeal, the defendant contends that the trial judge should have instructed the jury that the additional instructions must be regarded with all other instructions given and that, by giving the additional nonrequested instruction on complicity, the trial judge became an interested advocate rather than an impartial arbiter.
We recognize the principles behind these arguments. When additional or supplemental instructions are given, "the court should admonish the jury that the additional instructions must be regarded with all the other instructions given." Flowers v.State,
We have reviewed the trial judge's conduct and comments in the trial of the defendant as contained in the record and find that the defendant's challenge to the judge's impartiality is without merit and that the additional instructions had no tendency to mislead the jury.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All Judges concur. *Page 625
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James Kelly Bell v. State.
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published