Pleasant v. State

15 Ark. 624
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 15 Ark. 624 (Pleasant 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
Pleasant v. State, 15 Ark. 624 (Ark. 1855).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Ehulish,

delivered the opinion of the Court. Pleasa/nt, the slave of Janies Milton, was indicted, in the Union Circuit Court, for an assault with intent to commit rape upon Sophia Fulmer, a white woman. He was tried, convicted, appealed to this court, and the judgment was reversed. See Pleasant vs. The State, 13 Ark. Sep. 361.

The cause having been remanded, it was twice continued on the motion of the accused, and afterwards, at the June term, 1854 he applied for a change of venue, upon which application the court made the following order:

“Came the State, &c., and the defendant is brought to the bar of the court in custody, &c., and files his petition for change of venue herein, upon his own application, duly sworn to by said ■petitioner, and the affidavit of James Milton, a creditable person, to the truth of the allegations therein, stating for cause of removal, as appears from said petition, that the minds of the inhabitants of said county of Union are so prejudiced against him (the appellant,) that he cannot have a fair and impartial trial; all of which appears to the satisfaction of the court. It is, therefore, considered and adjudged by the court, that the trial of this cause be removed to the county of Ouachita, in this State. It is further ordered, by the court, that said defendant be remanded to the jail of the county of Union, in the custody of the sheriff, &c.; and that, without any unnecessary delay, the said sheriff7 from thence take the body of the said defendant, and him convey to the jail of said county of Ouachita, and there deliver him to the keeper of said jail, together with the order by virtue of which the said defendant is imprisoned and held: and it is further ordered, that this cause be certified accordingly.”

A duly authenticated transcript of the record and proceedings in the cause, including the order of removal, the petition therefor, &c., &c., appears to have been transmitted to the Ouachita Circuit Court, where the case came on to be tried at the September term, 1854.

The counsel of the prisoner moved the court to dismiss and strike the cause from the docket, for want of jurisdiction, on the grounds, that the order for the change of venue, was not made in compliance with the statute, and was not sufficient to divest the jurisdiction of the Union Circuit Court, and vest it in tbe Oua-chita Circuit Court.

I. The court overruled the motion, and the defendant’s counsel excepted.

The defendant was tried by a jury, convicted, motion for a new trial, and in arrest of judgment, overruled, and bill of exceptions setting out the facts.

On the trial, Sophia Fubner introduced, as a witness,' on the part of the Státo, testified, in substance, that she was the Sophia Fulmer mentioned in the indictment- — she knew the defendant, his name was Pleasant — he was a negro man, and belonged to James Milcon. He came to her house, in the fall of 1851, laid down the yard fence, rode into the yard, hitched his horse to a bush, and come into the house where she was ironing or starching clothes. There was a jug under the table, and a bottle setting on the table; and he said, “you seem to have liquor here;’’ and took up the bottle, and before she had time to speak, took a drink; and gathered hold of her breast, and asked her to give him a chew of tobacco, and as she handed him the tobacco, he caught her by the arm, and took hold of her breast again, and stove her down on the floor, several times, and stove her on the bed, and tried to smother her with her clothes, where her baby was lying, and threw her on the baby, and satisfied himself on her clothes and knees and legs- — she did not know that she was thrown on the baby, but it kept screaming — and, so soon as he was done, he jumped up and ran as fast as he could ; and the first time she saw him, after he got off of the bed, was as he jumped off the gallery, fixing his pantaloons, and going towards his horse. She then got the gun, and when she got to the door with it, he was just going out of sight, on his horse. She then threw down the gun on the bed, took up the child, and ran toward the mill, where her brother and Mr. Landers were. They were the closest persons to the house she knew of. She told them what had happened at the house, and Mr. Landers went with her to the house. She was bruised on her breast and arm, and her breast was torn down before. The negro caught hold of her breast, and threw her on the floor. She tried to scream and halloo as loud as she could, but he tried to smother her with her clothes. He took her dress and all her other clothes, and pulled them up over her head. This was done in the county of Union, State of Arkansas. Pleasant was a negro, and she a white woman.

II. (To the proof, b}7 Mrs. Fulmer, that she was a white woman, the defendant objected, the court overruled the objection, and he excepted.)

The negro, Pleasant, had been to the mill, and came back by the house of witness, but turned out of the direct road, and came to the house.

Cross-examined — Defendant had never been to her house before, as she recollected, but had passed by, and asked for peaches, and gone to the orchard and got them. When she got to the door with the gun, defendant was going out of sight, around the horse lot, not more than fifty yards from the house, on his horse. The mill is a half mile from the house, and the house is twenty yards from the road he ought to have gone, in going home, or not quite so much, very close by. The first part of the day was wet, was not cold, but cool "weather. It is called six miles from the negro’s house to the mill. He came to the mill early in the morning. She could not state the hour of the day when the assault on her occurred. It was not cold enough to have a fire. The fire bad died down after she got breakfast, and she did not mend it up any more. There was a little fire in the fire place, not much. It was not more than eight or nine o’clock, when the defendant came there to the mill. She did not see him as he went, though she was at home all the morning.

She agreed to take from James Milton, the owner of defendant., as a compensation not to prosecute the suit, $125, if he would run the boy off*, and that she was scared into it by her brother, James Fogle, and Mr. Landers, and another man whose name she did not know. There were present, at the time, her brother, Landers, her husband, Jacob Fulmer, James Milton, John C. Willingham and Bicbard Goode, and tbe stranger, whose name she did not know. The money to be obtained on the compromise, was not to be divided between her and Landers, and she knew of no understanding by which any debt her husband owed Landers was to be paid out of the money to be obtained from ’Milton. Did not know whether she said or not, at the time the compromise was being talked about, that the reason why she would compromise, she knew she was under a bad character, and did not want to go to court. They stated to her that they would prove certain things on her, and blacken her character. This, they said at the time they were persuading her to. compromise; and they told her the law would not hurt her for compromising. She did not swear on the .former trial of this cause that she got the gun first, and he (the negro) left afterwards, but that he left, and was on the gallery in a run, when she got the gun.

III. The defendant’s counsel proposed to ask the witness, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ark. 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pleasant-v-state-ark-1855.