Meyer v. State

19 Ark. 156
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 19 Ark. 156 (Meyer 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
Meyer v. State, 19 Ark. 156 (Ark. 1857).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice

English delivered the opinion of the Court.

At the June term, 1856, of the Pulaski Circuit Court, Louis Meyer was convicted upon an indictment for the murder of John Clodell, and sentenced to the Penitentiary for twenty-one years. The Court having refused him a new trial, he excepted and brought error.

1. The' prisoner insists that it appears from the record before us, that he was tried at a term of the Court held at a time not authorized by law The record entry showing the time when the Court was held, is as follows:

“ Be it remembered, that at a Circuit Court, begun and held within and for the county of Pulaski, etc., at etc., on the first Monday of June, A. D. 1856, being the twenty-third day of said month, and the time prescribed by law for holding said court, present, the Hon. J. J. Clendenin, judge, etc., etc., the following proceedings were had,” etc.

The fourth Monday of June, 1856, was the time prescribed by the law then in force, for holding one of the regular terms of the Pulaski Circuit Court; and the fourth Monday was the twenty-third day of that month. The entry above copied shows that the Court was commenced on the 23d day of June, which is corroborated by several other entries contained in the transcript before us. The recital, therefore, in the caption entry, that the Court was begun and held on the first Monday of June, is manifestly a clerical error, made, perhaps, in transcribing the record, etc. At all events, it sufficiently appears that the Court was commenced on the day prescribed by law.

2. It appears from the bill of exceptions, that the parties failing to make up a full jury from the regular veniremen, twenty talesmen were summoned, and a list of their names furnished to the prisoner. Thomas Beard, the first upon the list, was called and put upon his voir dire, (being challenged for cause, we suppose,) and was asked by the Court, whether he had formed or expressed any opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner?

He answered that he had.

The Court asked him whether that opinion was formed upon rumor or from hearing the witnesses? He answered that it was from rumor.

Whereupon, the prisoner’s counsel, by leave of the Court, asked him whether he had conversed with any one about the case?

He answered that he had conversed with several persons.

Prisoner’s counsel then asked him if he knew whether the persons with whom he had conversed were witnesses?

He answered that he did not.

The names of several of the witnesses for the State were called over, and he said he had not conversed with any of the persons named.

Whereupon the Court decided that he was a competent juror, and neither party challenging him peremptorily, he was sworn as such, but the prisoner excepted to the opinion of the Court deciding the juror to be competent; and made this one of the grounds of his motion for a new trial.

In prosecutions by indictment, the Bill of Rights (sec. 4,) secures to the accused, a trial by an impartial jury.

If a juror has formed or delivered an opinion on the issue, or any material fact to be tried, it is good cause of challenge; but if it is made to appear that such opinion is founded upon rumor, and is not such as to bias or prejudice the mind of the juror, he is competent. Such is clearly the import of sec. 161, chap. 52, Digest, as held in the case of Stewart vs. The State, 13 Ark. 727.

In this case, the juror, having stated that he had formed an. opinion upon rumor, should have been required to state also-that the opinion was not such as to bias or prejudice his mind, in order to render him competent. And having stated that he had conversed with persons about the case, if he had formed his opinions from such conversations, he should have been required to state further, that such persons did not profess to have a personal knowledge of the matters stated by them, in order to show that his opinion was really founded on rumor, but it was not necessary for him to know, or be able to state, whether such persons were witnesses in the cause or not, as held in Stewart’s case.

Where a juror admits that he has formed or expressed an. opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, the law regards him as an unfit person to compose part of such impartial jury as the Bill op Rights secures to the accused; but the disqualification is removed, if he be able to state that such opinion is founded upon rumor in its proper sense, and is not such as to bias or prejudice his mind. This is the substance and effect of the decision in the Stewart case on this point.

The Attorney General insisted in the argument of the cause, that the juror was not asked whether the opinion formed by him was such as to bias or prejudice his mind; and that the prisoner having failed to interrogate the juror as to this, could not afterwards complain of the omission. But this is not a tenable position. The juror being challenged for cause, whenever it appeared that he had formed or expressed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, his incompetency was made out, and it was incumbent on the State, in order to remove the disqualification, to make two things appear; first, that the opinion was founded upon rumor; and second, that it was not such as to bias or prejudice the mind of the juror.

It follows that the Court erred in deciding Beard to be a competent juror.

After his competency was determined by the Court, the prisoner did not get clear of him by peremptory challenge,^but permitting him to be sworn as a juror, rested upon his exception to the decision of the Court, which he had a right to do, as clearly intimated upon the authority of cases cited in Stewarfs case.

3d. John Peay, the sheriff, witness for the State, testified that on the night that he heard that the prisoner had shot the deceased, he went immediately and arrested him, and while under arrest he remarked to the prisoner that it was a bad scrape. To which the prisoner made some reply which witness did not understand, and then said “ he stole my ax and some crackers from me, and I shot him, and would do it again.”

Witness understood him to speak of the person he had shot. Witness said nothing to the prisoner, before he made the above confession, except “ that it was a bad scrape.”

The prisoner objected that it was not competent for the State to prove the confession made by him under the circumstances stated by Peay, but the Court overruled the objection, and the prisoner excepted, and made this one of the grounds of his motion for a new trial.

A confession is not admissible in evidence, unless it was made freely and voluntarily, and not under the influence of promises or threats. Roscoe Cr. Ev. 39.

The remark made by Peay to the prisoner, on arresting him, “ that it was a bad scrape'' imports neither a promise nor a threat, and the response of the prisoner seems to have been freely and voluntarily made.

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19 Ark. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-state-ark-1857.