Edmonds v. State

34 Ark. 720
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 34 Ark. 720 (Edmonds 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
Edmonds v. State, 34 Ark. 720 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

English, C. J.

Thomas Edmonds was indicted in the circuit court of Johnson county for murder. On his application, the venue was changed to the circuit court of Franklin county, where he was tried; found guilty of murder in the first degree ; motions in arrest of judgment and for a new trial were made and overruled, and he took a bill of exceptions. He was sentenced to suffer the death penalty on the twenty-seventh of February, 1880, and prayed an appeal, which was allowed by one of the judges of this court.

I. In the Franklin circuit court, the prisoner moved to quash the indictment, because the circuit court of Johnson county discharged the list of grand jurors selected by the jury commissioners, and ordered the sheriff to summon others, etc.

It appears from the transcript, that on the fourteenth of April, 1879, being the first day of the term of the circuit court of Johnson county at which the indictment was found, the court, on motion of the state’s attorney, quashed the list of grand jurors and alternates selected by the jury commissioners, because they had failed to certify said lists as the law required, and thereupon the sheriff'was ordered to summon sixteen good and lawful men, citizens and qualified electors of Johnson county, to serve as grand jurors, etc. The sheriff, accordingly, returned into court the requisite number of men, who were found qualified, and impanneled and sworn as a grand jury.

That the court had the power to make the order complained of, was decided by this court in Straughan et al. v. State, 16 Ark., 43; and there is nothing before us to show that the power was improperly or erroneously exercised in this case.

II. The prisoner demurred to the indictment, and its sufficiency was also questioned by the motion in arrest of judgment.

The indictment contained two counts :

The first count charged, in substance, that “the said Thomas Edmonds, on the fourteenth day of August, 1878, in the county of Johnson, etc., willfully, deliberately, feloniously, and of his malice aforethought, and with premeditation, did kill and murder one Julia Edmonds, then and there being, in some way and manner, and by some means, instruments and weapons to the jurors unknown,” ete.

The second count charged that “the said Thomas Edmonds, on the .fourteenth day of August, 1878, in the county of Johnson, etc., willfully, deliberately, feloniously, of his own malice aforethought, and with premeditation, did kill and murder a certain woman, whose Christian name was Julia, but whose surname is to the jurors unknown, then and there being, in some way and manner, and by some means, instruments and weapons to the jurors, unknown, contrary,” etc.

The first, second and third causes assigned for the demurrer were, in substance, that the indictment did not aver the manner or means of the alleged murder.

The fourth cause was, that it did not state such facts as constituted any crime known to the law.

And the fifth and sixth causes were, that if the indictment charged any crime, it charged two separate and distinct offenses.

The court sustained the fifth and sixth causes of demurrer, and required the attorney for the state to elect on which count of the indictment he would proceed, and he elected to dismiss the first count, and proceed on the second, and thereupon the court overruled the demurrer.

The trial and verdict were upon the second count of the indictment.

The count was not bad on demurrer, or in arrest of judgment, because it stated that the surname of the woman alleged to have been murdered was to the grand jury unknown.

If known, it should have been alleged; if not, it might be so stated, as it was, and this was matter in issue to be proved by the state on the trial. Cameron v. State, 13 Ark., 717.

Anri so it has been held that an averment, as in this case, that the defendant committed the crime at a place specified, “ in some way and manner, and by some means, instruments and weapons to the jury unknown,” is sufficient, when the circumstances of the case will not admit of greater certainty in stating the means of death. S Greenleaf Ev., note 4 to sec. 130; Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush., 295; People v. Colt, 3 Hill (N. Y.),432.

No doubt the mode or instrument of death, if known to-the grand jury, or if it can be ascertained by them, should be alleged in the indictment. Thompson v. State, 26 Ark., 323; 29 ib., 168.

But this rule must not be carried so far as to furnish a shield from punishment, where it is plain that a crime has been committed. People v. Taylor, 3 Denio, 95. It will be seen from the evidence in this case that if the means of death could not have been so alleged, the crime might have gone unpunished.

A person might be killed by violence on the bank of a river, and then thrown into the stream, and the body when afterward discovered might be so decayed and wasted as to leave no trace of the violence, and it might be impossible to tell whether the death was from drowning, or from the use of some weapon. Other examples may be easily imagined, though they may not frequently occur.

In Howard v. State, ante, 433, the question whether a count in an indictment, in which it was alleged that the means of death was unknown to the grand jurors, was valid, was waived, as not material in that case" to be decided. Here the prisoner was convicted on a count making such allegation, and we hold it to be valid on demurrer, or motion in arrest of j udgment.

III. The term of the Eranklin circuit court, at which the prisoner was tried, commenced on tbe third of November, 1879.

On the twenty-fifth of that month the prisoner filed a motion for a continuance of the case. The motion was based on the grounds: First, the absence, from sickness, of John W. Bush, Esq., who was represented to be the lead-' ing counsel of the prisoner; second, the absence of H. F. Barna, a witness for prisoner, by whom he expected to prove that he stopped at Barna’s hotel, in Argenta, and had with him the woman, Julia Edmonds, and her child, after the date of her alleged murder, and after she and her child were missing at Pratt’s Landing, on the Arkansas river, in Johnson county, where it was supposed they were murdered; third, the absence of James Williams, of Washington county, a witness for prisoner, by whom he expected to prove that, on the day after the supposed murder of Julia Edmonds, and after she and her child were missing from Pratt’s Landing, prisoner conversed "with said Williams at Clarksville, and had with him said Julia and her child, and with them took passage on an eastern bound train of the Little Rock and Fort Smith Railway for Argenta.

The motion was taken up on the third of December, when it was found that the two witnesses named in the motion as absent, were then present, .which left nothing in the motion but the absence of John W. Bush, Esq., and the court overruled the motion, and prisoner excepted.

Thereupon the prisoner filed an amended motion for continuance, on two grounds: First, the absence of Frank Marion, Amanda Marion, and Mrs. M. S. Cook, material witnesses for prisoner. That he had learned on the day before, that J. N.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ark. 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmonds-v-state-ark-1879.