Fisher v. State

174 S.W.2d 446, 206 Ark. 177, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 126
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 11, 1943
Docket4314
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 446 (Fisher 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
Fisher v. State, 174 S.W.2d 446, 206 Ark. 177, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 126 (Ark. 1943).

Opinion

Robins, J.

Petitioner, Ulysses Fisher, seeks by petition for writ of certiorari to have quashed a judgment of the circuit court of Bradley county, under which petitioner, on his plea of guilty to a charge of grand larceny, was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of twenty-one years. Attached to his petition as exhibits are duly certified copies of the various documents and orders of the court necessary to a consideration and determination of this case. Neither the authenticity nor the correctness of these exhibits is challenged and we are therefore treating them as the record in the case.

Petitioner urges that this judgment was erroneous for the reason that the lower court should have' granted his motion for a continuance on the ground that petitioner’s attorney was a clerk in the general'assembly, which was in session at the time petitioner was sentenced; and for tlie further reason that the judge who presided at the time the judgment complained of was rendered was prosecuting attorney when the information against'petitioner, on which he -was sentenced, was filed.

It appears from tlie petition and record herein that on February 1, 1941, Hon. John M. Golden, prosecuting attorney of the Tenth Judicial Circuit of Arkansas, filed in the lower court an information charging petitioner with the offense of grand larceny; that on February 4, 1941, petitioner entered a plea of guilty to this charge, and the court continued the case during good .behavior of petitioner, as is authorized by the provisions of § 4053 of Pope’s Digest of the Laws of Arkansas; that on January 25, 1943,-the prosecuting attorney filed an information against petitioner charging him with manslaughter; that Mr. C. C. Hollensworth had acted as attorney for the defendant when he entered the plea of guilty in the grand larceny case, and that he was also engaged to represent petitioner in the homicide case; that Mr. Hollensworth was employed and served as parliamentary clerk for the House of Representatives during the 54th General Assembly of Arkansas, the session of which lasted from January 12, 1943, until March 11, 1943; that as a result of a conference between Mr. Hollensworth and the prosecuting attorney Mr. Hollensworth understood that petitioner’s case was to be postponed until after the adjournment of the legislature; that a motion for continuance in both cases, setting up that petitioner’s attorney .was a clerk of the general assembly then in session, was duly filed; that the manslaughter charge against petitioner was withdrawn and an indictment charging petitioner with murder was returned by the grand jury on February 1,1943; that on February 1,1943, petitioner was brought into court, then being presided over by Hon. John M. Golden as judge, and, in the absence of and without notice to his said attorney, a hearing was had, which resulted in petitioner being sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for twenty-one years on the grand larceny charge.

I.

Section 6147 of Pope’s Digest provides: “Any and all proceedings in suits pending in any of the courts of this State in which any attorney for either party to any suit is a member of the Senate or of the House of Representatives or is a clerk or Sergeant-at-arms or a doorkeeper of either branch of the General' Assembly, and any and all proceedings in suits pending in any of the courts of this state in which any member of the legislature or clerk or sergeant-at-arms or doorkeeper of either branch of the General Assembly is a party, shall be stayed for not less than 15 days preceding the convening of the General Assembly and for thirty days after its adjournment, unless otherwise requested by any interested member of said General Assembly.”

It is not disputed that Mr. Hollensworth, who had been representing petitioner in the grand larceny case, was a clerk of the House of Representatives in the performance of his duties as such on January 25,1943, when the motion for continuance was filed and on February 1, 1943, when sentence was pronounced against petitioner. The lower court should therefore have granted the motion for continuance. Barton-Mansfield Co. v. Higgason, 192 Ark. 535, 92 S. W. 2d 841.

II.

The Constitution of Arkansas, art. VII, § 20, provides: “No judge or justice shall preside in the trial of any cause ... in which he may have been of counsel

The Constitution of Texas contains a provision as to the disqualification of judges which is similar to that in the Constitution of Arkansas. In the case of Terry v. State (Tex.), 24 S. W. 510, it appeared that the circuit judge before whom Terry had been tried and convicted for the theft of a horse had, while prosecuting attorney, received the complaint of the owner of the horse, reduced it to writing, had it sworn to by. the owner and filed same in court, this being the procedure for institution of such prosecution. The court in that case held that the judge was disqualified.

The Supreme Court of West Virginia, in the case of State v. Cottrell, 45 W. Va. 837, 32 S. E. 162, in sustaining the contention that the judge before whom Cottrell was convicted of a felony was disqualified by reason of having-signed the indictment against Cottrell while prosecuting attorney, said: “Nor is it proper for a judge to try indictments signed by him as prosecuting attorney. No prosecutor likes to quash his own papers, and his knowledge of the facts obtained while prosecutor may tend to prejudice the prisoner’s right to a fair and impartial trial. Evil appearances should be avoided, that the fountain of justice may be kept pure.”

In the case of Mathis v. The State, 3 Heisk., 127, the supreme court of Tennessee said: “It appears from the record, that the indictment was signed by James E. Nice, Attorney General, and that he presided as Judge on the trial of the cause. This is assigned as error, and we think, correctly. The Constitution, art. 6, § 11, provides that no judge shall preside in any cause in which he may have been of counsel; and § 3913 of the Code, contains a similar provision. We are unable to discover any reason for prohibiting a Judge from presiding in a civil cause in which he may have been of counsel, which does not apply on the trial of a criminal cause. The Constitution makes no- distinction, and we are not authorized to make any.”

The rule is thus stated in 33 Corpus Juris, p. 1005: “A judge who while prosecuting- attorney actively participated in the preparation of a criminal case is disqualified to try it . . .” The precise question here presented has not heretofore been decided by this court, but our conclusion is that a judge who, while serving- as prosecuting attorney before going on the bench, had signed an information or indictment in a criminal case had been “of counsel” in such case and under the Constitution is disqualified to preside in any trial or hearing therein.

While this court, in the case of Shropshire v. State, 12 Ark. 190, decided in 1851, held that .the fact that the indictment against Shropshire was signed by a prose-exiting attorney named A. B. Greenwood and tlie trial was subsequently had before a judge named A. B.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 446, 206 Ark. 177, 1943 Ark. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-state-ark-1943.