Eyer v. State

164 S.W. 756, 112 Ark. 37, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 198
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 9, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 164 S.W. 756 (Eyer 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
Eyer v. State, 164 S.W. 756, 112 Ark. 37, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 198 (Ark. 1914).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

The defendant, Mike Eyer, appeals from a judgment of conviction of the crime of murder in the second degree, under an indictment which' charged murder in the first degree. He killed one Noel O ’Hare by striking him with an axe handle.

Defendant was engaged in the timber business along White Kiver, and was floating blocks of timber down the river past the city of Newport. There was a tent on one of the blocks for the accommodation of the men as the timber floated down the river. Deceased had been employed to assist in handling the timber and accompanied defendant on the trip down the liver. A controversy had-arisen between him and defendant concerning the payment of his wages, and O’Hare refused to do any more work, but insisted on remaining on the timber and continuing to the destination, where he threatened to assert a lien on the timber for his wages which he claimed had not been paid. While the defendant and O’Hare were in the tent together, defendant struck O’Hare with an axe handle and at once left the tent, and, meeting one of his acquaintances, told the latter that he had knocked a man in the head and asked the man accosted to take him to town in his buggy. O’Hare was taken to Newport during the afternoon, and that night was examined by a physician, who testified that he found him unconscious and that blood was running from his nose and mouth; that just back of the left ear the scalp was swollen and that the left eye was black and swollen. 0 ’Hare died the next morning, and a post mortem examination was held, which disclosed the fact that his skull was fractured and membrane perforated and that there was ..a clot of blood on the brain.

The State introduced the testimony of an absent witness, one Wilhite, taken at the examining trial, in substance, as follows concerning the killing: “As I started out of the tent Mike (defendant) came in and I looked around and saw him grab an axe handle, and was standing behind Noel O’Hare, who was sitting on a box with a day book in his hand figuring. Mike said, ‘Noel, what are you going to do?’ and Noel said, ‘I don’t know.’ Just as he said this, Mike struck him with the axe handle. Mike struck him three times on the body, then threw the axe handle down and went out of the tent and got into his boat and went on down the river. I never saw any butcher knife in his hands. O’Hare never made any demonstration or show of fight. Mike Eyer was standing behind Noel O’Hare when he struck him. I never paid any attention to where the knife was, but there was a knife in the tent; we used it to cut meat. ’ ’

The defendant, in his testimony, gave a different account of the matter. He testified that he had been up the bank of the river to get some timber, and came back to' the tent for the purpose of getting some chewing tobacco. He related the circumstances which ensued in the following language: “I went into the tent past O’Hare and was squatted down by the suitcase getting my tobacco. I looked around and O’Hare was coming to a standing-position and was about half straight with a butcher knife in his hands. I said to him, ‘What are you going to do?’ and he says, ‘I will show you.’ This is the knife that O’Hare had. There were two axe handles and a Winchester lying there and I grabbed one of the axe handles and when O’Hare got within my reach I struck him. I struck him because he was coming at me with a butcher knife. I thought that he was going to kill me. O’Hare was a man that weighed about 185 pounds and I was afraid of him.”

The testimony of other witnesses tended to show that Wilhite was not in the tent at the time defendant struck the blow. Two witnesses testified, in substance, that they were near the tent and heard the “racket” and .that Wilhite was not in the tent but ran up toward it about that time.

There was a conflict in the testimony; but we are of the opinion that there was enough to warrant the jury in finding that the killing was done under such circumstances as made out the'crime of murder in the second degree.

It is contended that the court erred in permitting the testimony of Wilhite to be introduced.

The coroner held an inquest' over the fiody of deceased, and the prosecuting attorney attended in person and wrote down the testimony of witnesses on a typewriter. It does not appear that defendant was present at the inquest, nor does it appear what the verdict of the coroner’s jury was. Subsequently, defendant was arrested and carried before a justice of the peace for examination. He appeared there with one of his attorneys and offered to waive examination, but at the request of the prosecuting attorney the justice of the peace proceeded with the examination. The prosecuting attorney produced an unsigned copy of the testimony of each witness taken at the coroner’s inquest, and as each witness was sworn and took the witness stand that testimony was read over to him, and each stated that it was his testimony and then signed it. This was done with reference to witness Wilhite, and the defendant was asked in each instance if he desired to cross examine. There is some testimony to the effect that defendant’s attorney did cross examine Wilhite. At the trial of this case below it was proved that Wilhite was absent and not within the jurisdiction of the court, and the justice of the peace was permitted to testify, giving the statements of Wilhite at the examining trial. This was done over defendant’s objection, and the ruling is now assigned as error.

The rule is thoroughly established by decisions of this court that the testimony of a witness at a former trial, on examination of the same issues, where the defendant was present and had an opportunity to cross examine, is admissible after it is shown that the witness is dead or beyond the jurisdiction of the court. The testimony of Wilhite comes within this rule. The method of examination before the justice of the peace was unusual, in that a written statement of his former testimony at the inquest was produced instead of his being examined orally. This related, however, not to the admissibility of the evidence, but to the method of .examination, and affected only his credibility. The witness stated, after hearing the statement read, that it was his testimony concerning the facts of the case, and the defendant was given an opportunity to cross examine him. That was sufficient to make the testimony competent and to answer the constitutional requirement that the defendant must have had an opportunity to face the witness and cross examine him. It was not, in any sense, an ex parte statement of the witness, made without an opportunity to defendant to cross examine.

Nor is the rule affected by the fact that defendant, at the examination, offered to waive the examination. Our statute makes it the duty of a justice of the peace to examine into the facts of the case before him, and a waiver by defendant does not defeat the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace to proceed with the inquiry for the purpose of determining the probable guilt or innocence of the defendant and the amount of bail to be fixed, if it is a bailable case. We think that the justice of the peace had jurisdiction to proceed with the examination and that the testimony was not rendered incompetent because of the fact that the examination was waived. The written transcript of the testimony of the witness was not, of itself, of any probative force, but the magistrate who presided at the examining trial testified that he heard the statement read over to the witness, who signed and approved it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 756, 112 Ark. 37, 1914 Ark. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eyer-v-state-ark-1914.