Bettis v. State

261 S.W. 46, 164 Ark. 17, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 14, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 46 (Bettis 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
Bettis v. State, 261 S.W. 46, 164 Ark. 17, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 356 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Wood, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Crawford County Circuit Court sentencing the appellants to death. The appellants were jointly indicted, tried and convicted at a special term of the Crawford Circuit Court, which was convened by the judge of that court in pursuance of the following order: “It appearing to the judge of the 15th Judicial (circuit), by notice from Sheriff A. D. Maxey, Dave Partain, prosecuting attorney, and from the representations of W. J. Martin, mayor of Van Burén, and other citizens of Crawford County, that the crime of rape and murder has been committed in Crawford County, and that the passions of the people of said county are thoroughly aroused, and that the sheriff and mayor of Van Burén and other citizens are apprehensive and believe that mob violence will be committed, and, .upon due consideration of said notice from the sheriff and reports and representations of the mayor and other citizens of same condition in said county of Crawford, and finding that said apprehension and belief of the sheriff and other citizens are well founded, and in order to avoid said apprehended mob violence, I therefore, as judge of the said district, call a special term of the Crawford Circuit Court, to convene at one o’clock on the 1st day of January, 1924, to examine into said charges of rape and murder, and the sheriff of Crawford County is ordered and directed to summon from the electors of Crawford County sixteen good and lawful citizens, to serve as grand jurors at said special term of said circuit court, and the clerk of said Crawford Circuit Court is directed to spread this order upon the criminal records of said court and to issue a venire facias for said grand jury to the sheriff of this county. The judge further finds that said special term of the Crawford Circuit Court.will not conflict with any other regular or adjourned court of the 15th Judicial District.

“Given under my hand this 29th day of December, 1923. Jas. Cochran, Judge.”

The court convened on the day and hour appointed, and the record shows that the sheriff returned a list of grand jurors to serve at the special term, and that the grand jury was duly impaneled, and returned into court the indictments upon which the appellants were separately tried and convicted. The indictments were valid.

The appellants moved to quash the indictments on the following grounds: “First, because there was no order made out by the judge and transmitted by him to the clerk of the court, and by him entered on the records of the court, setting out that there was some person confined in jail, who might be tried upon some criminal charge, and naming the party. Second, that said order was not filed and entered of record ten days before the commencement'of the term.” The court overruled the motion.

This presents the first ground of appellants’ motion for a new trial. Section 2211 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest provides: “Whenever the crime of rape, attempt to commit rape, murder, or any other crime calculated to arouse the passions of the people to an extent that the sheriff of the county apprehends and believes that mob violence will be committed within the State of Arkansas, it shall be the duty of the sheriff of the county in which the crime of rape, murder or any other crime herein described shall have been committed, to notify the judge of the circuit or district including such county of the facts in the case, and to request such judge to call a special term of court in order that the person or persons charged with such crime or crimes may be brought to an immediate trial.” Act of May 17, 1909.

Section 2212 provides: “It shall be the duty of such circuit judge, upon receipt of such notice and request from such sheriff, and upon due consideration of the subject, and upon finding that the apprehension and belief of the sheriff are well founded, to call a special term of his court, impanel a special grand jury, and provide all the necessary judicial-machinery for the legal trial of the person or persons charged with the crime or crimes above designated, such trial to begin within ten days from the receipt, by such judge, of such notice from the sheriff, as herein provided.”

The above sections are parts of “An act to prevent mob violence or lynching within the State of Arkansas,” which was approved May 17,1909.

The special term of the court at which the appellants were convicted was called under the authority of the above act, under §§ 2211-2217, inclusive, of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, and not under the authority of §§ 2218-2223, inclusive, which are a part of the Revised Statutes providing for the holding of special terms of court to try persons in jail. The two statutes, as indicated by their titles, were enacted for different purposes, and the proceeding under them is entirely different.

The appellants contend that the order of the court calling the special term does not show any request from the sheriff that the special term be called. In this the appellants are mistaken, for the order begins: “It appearing to the judge of the 15th Judicial (Circuit), by notice from Sheriff A. D. Maxey.” This recital is sufficient to show that the .sheriff requested the call. The statute makes it the duty of the sheriff, if he apprehends violence, to notify the judge of the circuit, and the recital above shows that the circuit judge was notified by the sheriff.

The appellants next contend that they were .not named as those to be tried at such special term. The statute does not require that the person or persons charged with the crime shall be designated by name in the call for a special term. The object of this law is to prevent mob violence and to expedite an inquiry through the court in order to bring to a speedy trial the person or persons charged with crimes of the character mentioned. The person or persons so charged may or may not be in jail. Their names may not be known to the sheriff, and it might be impossible for the sheriff, in notifying the circuit judge of the facts in the case and requesting the special term, to name the person or persons charged with the crime or crimes mentioned. The outstanding purpose of the statute is to have an expeditious inquiry made into the facts, so that persons charged with crime may have an immediate trial, according to law, in order to counteract the mob spirit and to prevent those whose passions are aroused by the heinous character of the offenses from resorting to violence and thus preventing the due course of law. It is not essential to.the jurisdiction of the judge, under this statute, to call a special term, that the sheriff, in his notice and request, should give him the names of the parties charged. Such a requirement might 'involve an impossibility, and thus thwart the wise purpose of the law-to bring on an immediate trial.

Appellants urge that the call was defective because it contained no direction for the summoning of a petit jury. But this is not one of the jurisdictional requirements of the statute. It is' not necessary that the order summoning the petit jury should be embraced in the call for the special term. This is so for the reason that it cannot be known in advance whether the grand jury will return indictments; and to issue a venire facias for a petit jury before indictments are returned, and when they might not be returned at all, would be causing the officials unnecessary labor and the county unnecessary expense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 S.W. 46, 164 Ark. 17, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bettis-v-state-ark-1924.