Buckner v. State
| Decision Date | 07 March 1933 |
| Docket Number | 7 Div. 972. |
| Citation | Buckner v. State, 25 Ala.App. 361, 146 So. 624 (Ala. App. 1933) |
| Parties | BUCKNER v. STATE. |
| Court | Alabama Court of Appeals |
Appeal from Circuit Court, St. Clair County; O. A. Steele, Judge.
Hershell Z. Buckner was convicted of unlawfully possessing prohibited liquor, and he appeals.
Reversed and remanded.
W. T Starnes, of Pell City, for appellant.
Thos. E. Knight, Jr., Atty. Gen., for the State.
The appellant was tried, and convicted, upon a complaint filed by the solicitor which charged that "he had in his possession spirituous, vinous or malted liquors or beverages a part of which was alcohol, in violation of law." No objection by demurrer or otherwise was interposed to the complaint, hence no point of decision in this connection is presented.
On the trial the court permitted the state to offer evidence to the effect that the searching officers found in appellant's barn several sacks of sugar. As afterwards determined by the court, this evidence was foreign to any issue involved upon this trial, therefore illegal and inadmissible, and the court in its oral charge said:
The testimony, referred to by the court, in the foregoing remarks, was wholly irrelevant, illegal, inadmissible, and hence incompetent; it should not have been allowed in the first instance. Its tendency was clearly prejudicial and injurious. The appellate courts of this state have repeatedly condemned the practice of admitting illegal evidence and afterwards excluding it, and it has frequently been declared that the practice cannot be encouraged, and when the record shows that anything was wrongfully said or done in the presence of the jury by the court, calculated to produce an impression upon the minds of the jury to the prejudice of the defendant, the case will be reversed. Davis v State, 18 Ala. App. 482, 93 So. 269; Patterson v. State, 23 Ala. App. 428, 126 So. 420; Stephens v. State, 17 Ala. App. 548, 86 So. 111. As stated in the case of Stephens v. State, 17 Ala. App. 548, 86 So. 111, 112, "We doubt if under the facts in this case, the line of inquiry being given the prominence and scope and emphasis it was, if the court could have so withdrawn it from the jury as not to have injured the defendant." Moreover, this illegal testimony, the record shows, was made the subject of argument by the solicitor in a very insistent and emphatic manner. This argument was never excluded by the court, although motion to this effect was made by counsel for defendant. It seems clear that the court erred in its rulings in permitting this argument to remain with the jury, and that this was highly prejudicial cannot be questioned.
The state's testimony tended to show that several bottles containing whisky were found upon the premises of...
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