Armstrong v. State

287 S.W. 590, 171 Ark. 1136, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 589
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 1, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 590 (Armstrong v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. State, 287 S.W. 590, 171 Ark. 1136, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 589 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellant was indicted for the crime of murder in the first degree, committed by killing his wife, Marie Armstrong, and on the trial of the case he was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment fixed at six years in the penitentiary.

There were several exceptions saved to the rulings of the court in the introduction of testimony, and those rulings are assigned here as grounds for reversal of the judgment, but the exceptions were not sufficiently raised in the motion for a new trial in order to preserve them for review by this court. The only assignments in the motion for a new trial relating to those rulings are as follows:

“1. The court erred in excluding the testimony offered by the defendant, and committed several errors in excluding the testimony of the various witnesses offered by the defendant and excluded by the court.
“2. The court erred and committed several errors in admitting the testimony admitted over the objection and exception of the defendant.”

These assignments are too general to properly raise the question as to the admissibility of the testimony pointed out in the exceptions made during the progress of the trial. Lomax v. State, 165 Ark. 386. It is not essential that the assignments in a motion for a new trial be specific as to the grounds upon which the exceptions were based, but they must be sufficient to identify the particular witness and the testimony to which the assignment is directed. An assignment as general in its nature as those set forth in the motion for a new trial now before us does not apprise the trial court of the errors sought to be reviewed, and gives the court no opportunity to correct its errors, hence there can be no review here.-

The same may be said about the assignments of error relating to the court’s charge to the jury. The instructions to which the exceptions related were not mentioned in the motion for a new trial, either by number or by substance. It is merely alleged in the motion that the court “committed separate and several errors in the giving of each and every instruction given by the court.” This is an objection in gross, which is not permissible. •

The only other assignment of error relates to .the legal sufficiency of the evidence.

■ Appellant and deceased were negroes, and lived on the farm of a Mr. Horne, about two. and a-half miles distant from Paris. Appellant had a daughter, by a former marriage, and also had children by decedent. The dead body of appellant’s wife was found in a well about sixty yards from their dwelling-house, early in the morning of December 28, 1925. The theory of the State is that appellant killed his wife .by striking her with some kind of blunt instrument or rock, and that he then threw her into the-well where the body was found. - Appellant’s contention is that his wife accidentally fell into the well and was drowned.

In addition .to appellant’s wife and family, he had living with him a hired colored boy named Ernest.

Mrs. Nora Horne, who lived about two hundred yards distant from appellant’s home, testified that, on the morning in question, before daylight, she heard voices over at appellant’s home, which she recognized as those of appellant and his wife. She testified that she heard appellant’s voice, but could not distinguish what he said, and that she heard appellant’s’wife’say, “Oh, Mr. Boss, Mr. Boss, Mr. Boss,” and also' heard her say, “Oh, Ernest, help me!” The witness testified that she hollered to the boy Ernest, and that, when he answered to the call, she called back to him, saying, “If Boss don’t quit, we are going to have him arrested.” The witness testified that appellant made no answer. The witness further testified that she could hear appellant talking to the boy, and heard the boy answer, “I’m. afraid to,’’ but she conld not distinguish what it was appellant said to the boy.

Walter Horne, husband of the preceding witness, testified that, about four-thirty o’clock on the morning in question, he walked out on his porch and “heard a racket, and discovered that it was down at Boss’s” (meaning appellant), “and heard deceased, Marie, holler,.‘Mr. Boss, Mr. Boss, Mr. Boss,’ probably half a dozen times” — that, after that, he heard appellant say, “Go on, Ernest.” The witness testified that he at once started in the direction of appellant’s home and met. the boy. Ernest, who told him that deceased was in the well, and that he (witness) then ran back to his own house and got a butcher-knife and cut down a swing-rope hanging in the yard, and then went over to appellant’s house to try to get the 'woman out of the well. The witness told all about the removal of the body from the well. The woman was dead at the time she was taken out, and was lifted out, after much difficulty, with grabs or hooks. According to the testimony’of the'witness,’the well was about sixty yards from the house, and it was walled up with rock to the surface of the ground and also to a distance of about a foot ór a foot and a-half above the ground. The well was about four and a-half feet square, but the covering lapped over so that there was. a space of about two feet wide, and there was an ordinary bucket attached to the rope, which was used in drawing up water.. There was no windlass or other appliance, and the custom was to drop the bucket down into the water and draw it up by hand. The water was within four or five feet of the top of well.

Witnesses who testified concerning the removal of the body from the well stated that there were wounds made on the head and face of the body where the hooks came in contact with them. One of the witnesses testified that the body was upright in the water, “just like she was standing in a well.” A physician, who assisted in the examination of the body after it was removed from the well, testified that there was a fracture of the skull in the median line, extending up and hack to the right about three-fourths of an inch; that there was a lineal fracture extending parallel to the longitudinal suture about two and a-half inches in length, that appeared to have been caused by a crushing blow, and that blood was continually oozing from it. That on the left side of the head, extending down into the left orbit, was another fracture; that three inches to the left of that was a fracture extending from the outer angle of the left orbit up and back about three inches; that there was a gash to the right of this, extending in the direction indicated by the witness, from which blood was oozing. The witness also testified that he discovered flesh wounds which were made by the grabs, or hooks, being buried in the flesh, and that the fractures spoken of were sufficient to produce death. The witness testified that he and his father, another physician, had held a post mortem and removed the lungs, but that they could not find any evidence of water being in the lungs or any other evidence of drowning. Another physician testified to the same effect, describing the wounds, and giving his opinion as to the cause of death and what time death occurred with respect to the body going into the well. The last physician testified that he did not find any water in the lungs, and that “a part of the lungs showed that she was in the well before she quit breathing entirely.”

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Related

Holland v. State
375 S.W.2d 234 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1964)
Osborne v. State
371 S.W.2d 518 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1963)
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87 S.W.2d 17 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1935)
Scott v. State
292 S.W. 979 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 590, 171 Ark. 1136, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-state-ark-1926.