Ford v. State

34 Ark. 649
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 34 Ark. 649 (Ford 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
Ford v. State, 34 Ark. 649 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

English, C. J.

When the transcript in this case was presented to one of the judges of this court for the allowance of-an appeal, though there was attached to it the certificate of the clerk of the court below, that it was a full, true and complete transcript of the record, etc.; yet it contained no entry shoyring the impanneling of the grand jury, nor any entry by which it was made to appear that the indictment was returned in1o court by the grand jury.

In. favor of human life, an appeal was allowed, and in furtherance of public justice, in accordance with the practice of the court, a certiorari was awarded, upon which the clerk has returned a transcript of the entries which were wanting in the original transcript.

It seems difficult of late to get the clerks to understand that the entry showing the impanneling of the grand jury is a part of the record in every criminal ease brought to this court on appeal or writ of error, and should be included in the transcript; and also the record entry showing that the indictment was returned into court by the grand jury.

To cure these omissions, the Attorney General or the court has had to order writs of certiorari in a number of cases, at the present and former tei’ms; and the failure of clerks to discharge a duty, which they ought to understand and must learn, has retarded in this court the administration of public justice.

' Supposing that the omissions were not willful on the part of delinquent clerks, we have not heretofore thought proper to order rules for contempt against them, but will feel compelled to do so, if such omissions occur after the publication of this opinion.

It now appears that on the sixteenth of December, 1879, Cal. Hughey, John Potter, L. L. Eord and Hiram Jeffrey, were indicted in the circuit court of Crittenden county, for murdering John Broadway, by shooting him with a pistol, on the twenty-sixth of November of that year;'the indictment charging the offense in the usual form, as murder in the first degree.

Potter and Foi’d were arraigned, tried on the plea of not guilty, and the following verdict was returned : “We, the

jury, find the defendants, John Potter and L. L.Eord, guilty, as charged in the indictment.” Signed by the foreman.

They moved for a new trial on a number of grounds, and among them that the verdict was contrary to law.

The court sustained the motion, and granted a new trial on the ground that the verdict did not fix the degree of murder of which the defendants were found guilty.

A nol. pros, was entered as to Potter, and he was discharged. Ford was again put on trial, and the jury found him guilty of murder in the first degree, as charged in the indictment. He moved for a new trial, which the court refused, and he took a bill of exceptions; was sentenced to be executed on the twenty-seventh of February, 1880, and prayed an appeal, which, as above shown, was allowed by one of the judges of this court.

I. The first verdict was no bar to a trial and conviction of appellant for murder in the first degree. Allen v. State, 26 Ark., 333.

"When the first verdict was announced, however, being insufficient, the court, before discharging the jury, should have ordered them to retire, and return a verdict in proper form. Gantt’s Dig., sec. 1957; Thompson v. State, 27 Ark., 328; Levells v. State, 32 Ark., 585.

But that was not done, and, hence, the verdict was set aside and a new trial ordered.

II. It appears from the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions, that John Broadway lived near the Mississippi river, in Crittenden county. About dark of the evening of the twenty-sixth of October, 1879, four men armed with pistols and guns, and masked, went to his house for the purpose, it seems, of robbing him of money. His wife and step son. William Daniels, were in the house with him. The leader, or “captain,” of the masked men, as the others called him, jumped on to the porch, and exclaimed, with an oath, “Throw" up your hands! We wrant money!” or' some such words. Broadway sprang up and took hold of a chair, and the leader shot and killed him. Turn or three of the men then went through the house, but what money they obtained does not appear. The four men then took "William Daniels to the woods, robbed'him of some money he had, tied him to a sapling with a fishing line, and left him there.

John Potter, who was made a witness for the state, identified the four masked men to be Hiram Jeffrey, the leader, Oal. Hughey (or Hewey, as. it is spelled in the bill of exceptions), appellant, Eord, and himself.

Some expressions of Eord, and circumstances, were in evidence conducing to prove that he was one of the four men.

There was no want of evidence to convict appellant, and our sense of justice is by no means shocked by the verdict.

Hi. It was proven that on the next morning after Broadway was murdered, seven men crossed the river in search of appellant, and found him in a cotton pen in Tennessee. Several of them testified that he said “it was a damned cold morning to call a fellow up out of his bed.” One of them replied: “ Yes, and a damned cold murder was committed on the other side of the river last night.” To which appellant responded: “Did that damned fellow puke on me?” The word “puke” was perhaps intended for peach.

One of the arresting party testified that when appellant rernarked “it was a damned cold morning,” etc., he asked: “ How many have you ail got ?” And witness replied: “ Three, with Mr. Potter.”

The-same witness testified that when Potter was being examined before the committing magistrate, appellant said to him: “Do you know that I could present the bullets you wanted to kill John Broadway with?” Potter replied that he did not think he could do it.

Appellant’s counsel moved to exclude the above expressions made by him, as incompetent and irrelevant, and the •court overruled the motion.

The witnesses proved that the expressions objected to, were voluntarily made by appellant. The court treated them as in the nature of confessions, and they were competent to go to the jury for what they were worth. Meyer v. State, 19 Ark., 156; 14 ib., 556.

IY. A witness also testified that, at the magistrate’s trial, Hewey said to appellant and Jeffrey: “Boys, I am out of this, and, if Potter don’t turn state’s evidence, we are all right.” To which, it does not appear that appellant made any reply.

Counsel for appellant moved to exclude this statement oi the witness as incompetent and irrelevant, ütnd the court overruled the motion.

The silence of appellant when Hewey, who was implicated with him in the crime, made the above remarks to him and Jeffrey, who was also implicated, was worth but little as a tacit admission, and such admissions should be received with great caution. We can not say, howrever, that the court erred in admitting it as competent for what it was worth. If appellant had felt that he was innocent of any participation in the crime, it would, perhaps, have been natural for him to have made some response to the remarks of Hewey indicating it.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ark. 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-state-ark-1879.