Cheatwood v. State

Decision Date07 May 1935
Docket Number6 Div. 785
Citation26 Ala.App. 440,162 So. 403
PartiesCHEATWOOD v. STATE.
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals

Rehearing Denied June 4, 1935

Appeal from Circuit Court, Blount County; J.F. Thompson, Judge.

Alex Cheatwood was convicted of assault, and he appeals.

Affirmed.

Certiorari denied by Supreme Court in Cheatwood v. State, 162 So. 404.

P.A. Nash, of Oneonta, for appellant.

A.A. Carmichael, Atty. Gen., and Jas. L. Screws, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.

SAMFORD, Judge.

The defendant was indicted on a charge of assault to ravish and on the trial he was convicted of a simple assault.

When the prosecuting witness was being examined she first testified to seeing the defendant in front of or near his house, at which time he approached her, made a proposal to her, and took her by the hand against her will; held on to her until a car approached them on the road, when defendant released her. All of this testimony was without objection or exception. Witness then testified that she went on up the road and that defendant followed her to a point near Oak Grove Church, where he caught her, forced her to drink some whisky, and then under threat from defendant that he would choke her if she didn't do as he said, she went off down in some thick woods with him; that he pulled off his overcoat, spread it on the ground, and told her to lie down on it, which she did, because she was afraid; that when she lay down on the overcoat she put her hands over her head and remembers nothing else until they were back on the road. She testifies: "I must have passed out and I don't remember anything else until we were back on the road. After I put my hands over my head I don't know what happened after that."

The defendant moved for an election claiming that there were two assaults, and objected to all of the testimony as to what transpired in the woods near the church.

The foregoing presents no case for an election, but was one continuing transaction culminating with the "passing out" of the witness down in the woods near the church. 16 Corpus Juris, 537.

Charges refused to defendant were either bad or the principles of law involved were covered by the court in his general charge.

There is no error of a reversible nature, and the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

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5 cases
  • Chancellor v. State
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Appeals
    • 23 novembre 1954
    ...during the period to cause it to lose its probative value in support of proof of the offense charged in the indictment. Cheatwood v. State, 26 Ala.App. 440, 162 So. 403; Newton v. State, 32 Ala.App. 640, 29 So.2d 353; Gassenheimer v. State, 52 Ala. When the young lady reached her home the n......
  • Commonwealth v. Farrell
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
    • 12 avril 1948
    ... ... found guilty on both counts of indictment No. 1811, and ... guilty on indictment No. 1812. He was sentenced to the State ... prison for a term of not more than five years and not less ... than three years on each count of indictment No. 1811, and on ... indictment ... Nieuhaus, 217 Mo. 332, 345; People v ... Oppenheimer, 156 Cal. 733, 740, or that the continuity ... was temporarily interrupted, Cheatwood v. State, 26 Ala. App ... 440 (certiorari denied 230 Ala. 574); State v. McCombs, 163 ... Kans. 225, does not require a different result ... ...
  • Reichert Milling Co. v. George, 6 Div. 772
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • 20 juin 1935
  • McMillan v. State, 8 Div. 47
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Appeals
    • 4 juin 1935
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