Hanson v. State

254 S.W. 691, 160 Ark. 329, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 279
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 8, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 691 (Hanson 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
Hanson v. State, 254 S.W. 691, 160 Ark. 329, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 279 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellant was a director and vice-president of the Lafayette County Bank, and was indicted and convicted for assenting to the reception of deposits by that bank after he knew the bank was in a failing condition. ,. i -i

The trial was had in Nevada County, upon a change of venue from Lafayette County, and for the reversal of the judgment it is first insisted that the transcript of the record made up by the clerk of Lafayette County contains no entry showing • the opening- of the circuit court of Lafayette County, nor of the impanelment of the grand jury,' nor of the return of the indictment into court by the grand jury. The indictment is in the usual form, and purports to have been regularly réturned by the grand jury of Lafayette County, and the transcript made up by the clerk of that county and certified to by him when the venue was changed, recites that it was “filed in open court in the presence of all the grand jurors this the 22nd day of February, 1922. J. H. Landers, Clerk.”

In support of this contention the case of Binns v. State, 35 Ark. 118, is relied on. In that case a motion in arrest of judgment was filed upon two ground: (1), that the transcript of the record on change of venue contained nó entry showing the opening of the circuit court at the term at which the indictment purported to have'been found; and (2), that it - contained no entry showing the impaneling of the grand jury. The court held the objections were well taken in fact, but before final judgment was filed a certiorari was ordered and a transcript returned which embraced the entries omitted in the, original transcript, and the judgment was affirmed.

The opinion in that case was written by Chief Justice ENGLISH, and cited the earlier case of Green v. State, 19 Ark. 178, the opinion in which case was also written by Judge ENGLISH.

In this case of Green v. State, the motion in arrest was filed after the return of the verdict of the jury, which submitted the question, “whether a grand jury had been, in point of fact, duly impaneled at the term of the court at which the indictment, upon which he had been tried, purported on its face to have been found.” It was upon this question that the writ of certiorari issued, and the court approved that action as a proper practice.

In this case of Green v. State, supra, there was a second ground for the arrest of the judgment, this being that the transcript did not show that the indictment was returned into open court by the grand jury. This omission was not cured by the return of the clerk to the writ of certiorari, although a statement of the clerk accompanying his return cured this omission, hut the court disregarded this statement of the clerk as amounting to nothing, and held that the motion in arrest should have been sustained because there was no showing in the transcript that the indictment was returned into open court by the grand jury. But in the .recital of facts leading up to this conclusion the court said: “It is true that there is no record entry copied in the transcript showing that the grand jury did return the indictment into court. Nor is there any note by the clerk upon the back of the indictment of its having been returned into court, and filed, as it appears in the transcript.”

We think the intimation is clear that, if there had been a notation upon the back of the indictment that it had been returned into, open court and filed, the court would not have held that there was no showing that the indictment had been returned into open court.

This decision was handed down in 1857, and at a time when matters of form were more scrupulously followed than they have been since the adoption of the Criminal Code, which occurred long after the above decision was rendered. Here there was a notation on the back of the indictment, made by tbe clerk of the conrt, that the indictment “was filed in open conrt in the presence of all the grand jury,” and, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, we assume that the trial conrt accepted this notation as a fact, and we think that action was warranted; and if these recitals are accepted as true, there was a term of conrt in which, during a session thereof, a grand jury, in the presence of all its members, returned the indictment upon which appellant was tried.

We know, as a matter of law, as well as from the transcript before ns, that the venue was changed on appellant’s motion and for his benefit and the proceedings thereby removed from the county where the indictment was returned to the county where the trial occurred, and we think the recital indorsed by the clerk on the indictment makes a prima facie showing that appellant had been properly indicted, which must be regarded as •conclusive in the absence of any showing that that recital is untrue.

It is very strongly insisted that the court erred in permitting certain witnesses to testify that the bank was in a failing condition on December 16,1920, this being the day on which the deposit was received. It appears that a committee of bankers examined the assets of the Lafayette County Bank. They did this by going through the collateral held by that bank, and by inquiring about the security for each piece of paper. They did this to determine whether the banks which they represented should extend additional loans to the Lafayette County Bank. It was admitted that the Lafayette County Bank had allowed its cash to fall below the legal reserve required by § 689, C. & M. Digest, and the assistance requested from the committee of bankers would have met this requirement. The committee was assisted in its examination of the bank’s assets by the cashier of that institution, hut appellant was not a party to the examination. At the conclusion of this examination it was the opinion of each member of the committee that the bank was in a failing condition;''and it is the admission of this testimony which is assigned as error.

We think the testimony was competent, and that it was something more than the mere expression of an opinion. The solvency of the bank conld not be ascertained^ as a mere matter of addition of its assets and the sub-,, traction of its liabilities. The bank’s solvency depended on the value of its assets, and the examination by the committee was to determine that fact. The assets were admittedly not worth their face, and the examination was to determine what they were worth. The liabilities of the bank were admitted, and we think it was no usurpation of the province of the jury to permit one to testify that he had gone through the assets of the bank and had found what their value was. Of course, this testimony was not conclusive on the jury, and other testimony on the'subject was heard, including that of appellant himself, who, in great detail, testified in regard to the value of collateral which he had deposited with the bank as the basis of the credit which he had himself obtained. These bankers were shown to be familiar with the value of the assets about which they testified, and we think there was no error in the admission of their testimony.

The court permitted the agent of the express company in the town where the bank was located to testify that, as agent of the’express company, he had received a collection from a bank in Texarkana, with directions to accept nothing but legal-tender or money in payment of the draft sent him for 'collection, the usual custom being to accept exchange drawn' on some .other bank.

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Related

Barnes v. State
83 S.W.2d 58 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1935)
Collman v. State
256 S.W. 357 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)
Sullivan v. State
257 S.W. 58 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 691, 160 Ark. 329, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-state-ark-1923.