Gurein v. State

193 S.W.2d 997, 209 Ark. 1082, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 15, 1946
Docket4404
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 193 S.W.2d 997 (Gurein 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
Gurein v. State, 193 S.W.2d 997, 209 Ark. 1082, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 536 (Ark. 1946).

Opinions

Smith, J.

Appellants were jointly tried upon an information the material portions of wbicb will be copied, and were found guilty, and each given a sentence of one year in the penitentiary, and from those judgments is this appeal. The „ information charges the violation of Act 193, of the Acts of 1943, page 412, alleged to have been committed as follows: "“The said defendants on the 15th day of September, 1945, in the Chickasawba District of Mississippi County, Arkansas, did unlawfully and with violence, force and threats prevent and/or attempt to prevent A. L. Cobb from engaging in the vocation of driving a bus, against the peace and dignity of the State of Arkansas.”

Before the trial began objections were filed to the arraignment and trial of appellants, which motion, in effect, challenged the constitutionality of the act, for the alleged violation of which they were put on trial. Without waiving the objection, it was conceded that the constitutionality of the act was settled by the opinion in the case of Smith and Brown v. State, 207 Ark. 104, 179 S. W. 2d 185.

Objection was made to a trial before the petit jury, which had just been impaneled, on account of the report of the grand jury read in open court, and in their presence. This report recited that the grand jury had been in session only oile day, and had examined no witnesses, and had found-no indictments, but had inspected the courthouse and jail, and made a report on the condition of those institutions.

This report recited that: “This grand jury has had its attention called and has discussed the matter of frequent disturbances and the commission of misdemeanors as an outgrowth of union organization or strikes and find that frequently there are assaults and disturbances caused, such as rocks being thrown through windows or into crowded buses. We wish to recommend to the sheriff of this county that he make every effort to see that every such violation is investigated and the wrongdoer arrested and brought to trial.”

This report made no reference to these appellants or any of them, and it does not appear that in impaneling the jury which tried appellants, any inquiry was made as to whether any prejudice had been engendered by hearing the report read.

A demurrer to the information was filed upon the ground that the “defendants are not reasonably apprized of what offense, if any, they stand charged. ’ ’ The basis of the demurrer is that the information charges disjunctively and not conjunctively the commission of the separate offenses of preventing and attempting to prevent a person from engaging in a lawful occupation. Another objection to the information is that it was not alleged that Cobb was prevented from engaging in a lawful vocation.

Answering the last objection first, it may be said that the information does charge that the appellants “did unlawfully and with violence, force and threats prevent and/or attempt to prevent A. L. Cobb from engaging in the vocation of driving a bus.” Driving a bus is, of course, a lawful occupation, and alleging it to be so would be merely to state an obvious fact of which judicial notice may be taken.

A more serious question is that the information alleged that the defendants did “prevent and/or attempt to prevent” Cobb from engaging in a lawful vocation. Section 1, of Act 193, provides that: “It shall be-unlawful for any person by the use of force or violence, ox-threat of the use of force or violence, to prevent or attempt to prevent any person from engaging in any lawful vocation within this state. ’ ’

It is therefore unlawful to prevent, or to attempt to prevent, any person by force or violence, or threats, from engaging in a lawful vocation, and inasmuch as the offense might be committed either by preventing, or by attempting to prevent a persoxx from engaging in a lawful vocatioxx, it was erroneous to charge these offexxses disjunctively, although it is conceded that the offenses could have been properly charged conjunctively. The case of Trout v. State, 177 Ark. 1029, 9 S. W. 2d 237, is cited to support this contention, it being there stated that the general rule is that where a statute makes it a crime to do any one of several things mentioned disjunctively, all of which are punished alike, the whole may be charged conjunctively, as a single offense, but that disjunctive allegations render a judgment of conviction invalid, for the reason that the accused is entitled to know certainly with what offense he is charged and to have the offense so charged that, upon acquittal or conviction, he may plead the same in bar of a subsequent prosecution for the same offense and establish his plea by the production of the former record.

Since the rendition of that opinion, there was adopted by the electors at the 1936 * general election, Initiated Act No. Ill, entitled: “An Act to Amend, Modify and Improve Judicial Procedure, and the 'Criminal Law, and for Other Purposes.” This act made numerous changes in the pleadings and procedure previously prevailing in the trial of criminal cases. Section 22 of that act entitled, “Contents of Indictments,” provides in the last paragraph of that section that: “The State, upon request of the defendant, shall file a bill of particulars, setting out the act or acts upon which it relies for conviction.” If therefore the defendants had been of the opinion that the information was uncertain as to the offense charged, they had the right to request a bill of particulars to advise whether they were charged with preventing, or only with attempting to prevent a person from doing a lawful act. This they did not do; had they done so, the objection as to the indefiniteness could have been met by the simple expedient of striking out the word “or” appearing in the phrase “and/or.”

Numerous cases are cited criticizing the use of this phrase “and/or” in either civil or criminal pleadings, the most temperate, of the criticisms being that it is slovenly pleading. But the use of this phrase, which we too condemn, does not so far render1 the information meaningless as to require us to sustain a motion filed in arrest of the judgment upon the ground that the information did not charge a public offense. It was held in the ease of Williams v. State, 99 Ark. 149, 137 S. W. 927, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 1056, that: “To carry ont the general purpose and intent of a statute, either civil or criminal, the words ‘and’ and ‘or’ are convertible.” The holding in the case of Clark v. State, 155 Ark. 16, 243 S. W. 865, is to the same effect. Having failed to ask for a bill of particulars, we think the right was waived to question the sufficiency of the information, inasmuch as it avers that appellants violated Act 193 by preventing and attempting to prevent’ C'obb from following a lawful vocation. t

The testimony developed the fact that appellants were on strike against their former employer, the Blythe-ville Coach Lines, engaged in operating passenger busses on and along the streets of the city of Blytheville. Their right to strike is not involved and is not questioned. They could work or not as they pleased.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.2d 997, 209 Ark. 1082, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gurein-v-state-ark-1946.