Kirkpatrick v. State

9 S.W.2d 574, 177 Ark. 1124, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 258
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 8, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 9 S.W.2d 574 (Kirkpatrick 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
Kirkpatrick v. State, 9 S.W.2d 574, 177 Ark. 1124, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 258 (Ark. 1928).

Opinions

Hart, O. J.

John P. Kirkpatrick prosecutes this appeal to reverse a judgment of conviction against him for attempting to induce Ge'thel Coates to withhold her evidence in the case of State of Arkansas against Lilhurn Kirkpatrick, pending iii the Saline Circuit Court.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in not sustaining a demurrer to the indictment. The charging piart of the indictment contains the following:

“The said John P. Kirkpatrick, in the county and State aforesaid, on or about the 21st day of November, A. D. 1927, did unlawfully, willfully and corruptly attempt, directly and indirectly, to induce one Gethel Coates to withhold her evidence and to deter her, the said Gethel Coates, from offering or giving evidence in a certain criminal case then pending in the circuit court of iSaline County, Arkansas, between the State of Arkansas, plaintiff, and Lilhurn Kirkpatrick, defendant,” etc.

It is contended that the use of the words “directly and indirectly” in the charging part of the indictment as copied above shows that it was intended to charge two distinct offenses, and that the use of the word “or” between “directly” and “indirectly” renders the indictment void for uncertainty. This contention is based on the general rule that, where a statute enumerates several acts disjunctively, which together or separately constitute the offense, an indictment thereunder, to charge more than one of them, which it may do in the same count, should do so in the conjunctive, and if the disjunctive is used, the indictment will be bad for uncertainty. This general rule was recognized and applied in Trout v. State, ante, p. 1029. In that case it was pointed out that malt, fermented and spirituous liquors might all he intoxicating liquors, hut they were different kinds of liquors. Hence a charge of selling vinous, malt and spirituous liquors would he in the conjunctive instead of in the disjunctive. The reason was that the accused was entitled to know which one of the different kinds of liquors he was charged with selling in order that he might be prepared to make his defense and in order that the record of the judgment of conviction or acquittal at that trial might be pleaded upon a subsequent indictment for the same offense.

On the other hand, where but one offense is charged but the several modes provided by the statute by which it may be committed are charged in the disjunctive, the indictment is good. Holland v. State, 111 Ark. 214, 163 S. W. 781. The reason is that the charge is based upon one offense, and the different modes of committing it provided in the statute are based upon the same transaction. Here the words, “directly or indirectly induce or attempt to induce any witness to absent himself, or avoid a subpoena or other process, or to withhold any evidence,” etc., as used in § 2562 of 'Crawford & Moses’ Digest, have the same effect. In the very nature of things, whenever an attempt to induce a witness to withhold her testimony or to change it is made indirectly, it is in the law as if it had been made directly. Therefore we hold this assignment of error is not well taken.

For the same reason the court did not err in refusing to require the State to elect whether it would rely upon proving that the defendant directly or indirectly attempted to induce the witness to change her testimony. The offense charged was an attempt to bribe G-ethel Coates in the case of State of Arkansas against Lilburn Kirkpatrick, and but one offense was charged, which might have been committed by directly or indirectly bribing the witness. In other words, the State in proving the offense might show that it was done or that the attempt to bribe was done directly or indirectly, or by both, means. In either event it related to the same transaction and constituted but one offense. To illustrate, it would have been competent to prove that the defendant attempted to induce the witness to withhold her testimony in a given case <by making- propositions to her mother, and then to have proved that the defendant made the same proposition directly to the witness herself.

It is next insisted that the'evidence is not sufficient to support the verdict. The indictment was based upon § 2562 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest. Mrs. S'. A-Lewallen, mother of G-ethel Coates, was the principal witness for the State. According to her testimony, Gethel Coates had a bastard child born to her, and she claimed that Lilburn Kirkpatrick, a son of John P. Kirkpatrick, was the father of the child. According- to her testimony, John P. Kirkpatrick asked her to come to see him. He then told her that he wanted her to get Gethel Coates to swear that she had had intercourse with other boys and men, and agreed to pay for that statement the sum of $100, and also to help support the baby as long as he lived. iBill Moore, a witm^ for the State, also testified that the defendant got him to go to Gethel Coates and tell her, in substance, that he would pay her money if she would keep the case against his son out of court. The defendant said that he would rather give what money the case would cost in court to her. The witness made this communication to Gethel Coates; and she said she did not want anything from the Kirkpatricks, land refused to take the money. According to the testimony of Gethel Coates, her mother and Bill Moore communicated these offers from the defendant to her, and she refused- to accept the offers. This evidence was legally-sufficient to warrant a conviction. It is true that, according to the testimony of the defendant and his witnesses, he was not guilty; but the jury were the judges of the credibility of the witnesses, and‘the testimony set out above by the witnesses for the State, if believed by the jury, was sufficient to warrant it in returning a verdict of gnilty.

Another assignment of error is that the court erred in holding that the jurors, W. A. Bussell and Winn Moore, who had served as jurors in the case of State of Arkansas v. Lilburn Kirkpatrick, were competent jurors in the case at bar. These jurors stated in their examination before the court that they had no bias or prejudice against the defendant. They stated that they had been on the jury in the case against Lilburn Kirkpatrick, but that this fact would not prejudice them in the present trial. The two cases were entirely different offenses, and the fact that the jurors had served in the case of State of Arkansas against Lilburn Kirkpatrick in no sense affected their competency in the case at bar.

Another assignment of error is that the court erred in not allowing the defendant to impeach the witness, Gethel Coates, by showing that she had been a juvenile delinquent, and had been charged with truancy in the defendant’s court. The defendant was at the time the county judge of Saline County. This court has held repeatedly that a witness cannot be impeached by proof of specific acts or incidents of bad .conduct. Dean v. State, 130 Ark. 322, 197 S. W. 684; Mobley v. State, 135 Ark. 457, 205 S. W. 827; Lockett v. State, 136 Ark. 437, 207 S. W. 55; and Davis v. State, 150 Ark. 500, 234 S. W. 482.

The next assignment of error is that the court erred in permitting the mother of Gethel Coates to testify that her daughter had told her that Lilburn Kirkpatrick, the son of John P. Kirkpatrick, was the father of her child. Now Lilburn Kirkpatrick had been indicted for carnal abuse, charged to have been committed by having intercourse with Gethel Coates, a girl under the statutory age.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 S.W.2d 574, 177 Ark. 1124, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkpatrick-v-state-ark-1928.