State v. Waller

43 Ark. 381
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 Ark. 381 (State v. Waller) 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
State v. Waller, 43 Ark. 381 (Ark. 1884).

Opinion

Eakin, J.

Waller was indicted by the grand jury for slander, under the act of March 19th, 1869. They charge him with the use of certain opprobrious words, regarding a married woman, which in their common acceptation convey an imputation of adultery. A demurrer to the indictment was sustained by the court, upon the express grounds, that the law was unconstitutional and void. The State sues a writ of error,

i slánfSony miAot ^aw *s’ Pel’liaPsJ unparalleled in civilized legislaan<l finds its explanation in the fierce passions and oicivil commotions of the period which succeeded the late civil war. It provides that any one shall be deemed guilty of slander, and punished by indictment, who shall falsely utter or publish words, which' in their ordinary acceptation shall amount to charge any one with4having been guilty of fornication or adultery; or to charge any one with having sworn falsely, whether with reference to a judicial proceeding or not ; or to charge any person with having been guilty of any other crime or misdemeanor whatever; or with having been guilty of any other dishonest business, or official conduct or transaction, the effects of which would be to injure the credit business standing, or to bring into disrepute the good name or character of such person so slandered. All such slander was expressly made civilly actionable, and it was further declared that it should be a crime, to be punished, on conviction, by impiisonment “in the penitentiary house of this State, at hard labor, for a term of not less than six months, nor more than three years,” or that the offender should be “fined not less than fifty nor more than three thousand dollars, or both fine and imprisonment • may be imposed, at the discretion of the court; and any person so convicted and punished by fine only, if such fine be not paid at once, be confined in the penitentiary house of this State, at hard labor, until such fine be paid, at the rate of two dollars a day.”

This statute, in its criminal aspect, has lain dead in our statute book for more than fifteen years since its passage ; and is now first challenged regarding its right to be there, under our constitution, It was once alluded to, arguendo, by Mr. Chief Justice English in the civil case of Roe and wife v. Chitwood, 36 Ark., 210, but it was not at all necessary to do so, as the question in that ease was whether the words used were actionable, and they had been made so by an act of 1837. (Gould’s Digest, Chap. 161, Sec. 1). The validity of the statute now in judgment made no point and had no importance in that case.

A “felony” under our law is defined to be “an offense of which the punishment is death, or confinement in the penitentiary.” All other crimes are misdemeanors. They are of a distinct grade and nature, and their boundaries must be defined by law. The same acts cannot at the same time constitute a felony and a misdemeanor-They cannot co-exist as the result of one and the same transaction. The crime must be one or the other, not both, or either. It results from the different natures of these classes of crime, under common law rules, and from their different punishments, and the divers modes of proceeding against offenders, says Mr. Bishop, that the same act cannot.be both one and the other. (Statutory Crimes, Sec. 174). If the construction and effect of the act be, as held by the Circuit Judge, “that it leaves to the discretion of the jury, the designation of the crime of the defendant, whether the same should be a felony, or a misdemeanor,” then it would be of questionable validity, as no such powers can be entrusted to juries. It will be seen however, that the power of determining whether the crime shall be punished as a felony, or a misdemeaner, is attempted to be vested in the court. The same objection may be made to that view of the act, and the same question arises. Does it define the nature and grade of the crime?

In Maine, a statute defined a “'felony” to include every offense punishable with death or by imprisonment in the State prison.” Another act provided that whoever should use any instrument with intent to destroy a child of which a woman might be pregnant, whether quick or not, and should destroy the child before its birth, should be punished by imprisonment in the state prison not more than five years, or by fine, &c. One Smith was indicted and convicted of murder, for having caused the death of a woman, unintentionally, in an effort to procure such an abortion. It was contended for him and conceded by the court, on common law principles, that if he had intended only to commit a misdemeanor, the crime would be only manslaughter. It was further contended that the offense which he had intended to commit was only a misdemeanor, inasmuch as it was not, of course, punishable by imprisonment in the state prison, but might be punished by fine. To this view the court did not assent, holding that he might be properly convicted of murder, on the ground that every offense was felony which was liable to the higher punishment. 32 Maine, 369 The case was reversed upon other grounds upon a writ of error, but the Supreme Court in doing so reaffirmed the doctrine above announced, as sound, holding that the conviction for the murder of the mother would have been proper, if the indictment had properly charged the intent to commit the statutory crime. Smith v State, 33 Maine, p. 48.

The same question, in a slightly changed aspect, was again presented in that State, in the case of State v. Mayberry, 48 Maine, 218. A. statute had declared it a conspiracy for two or more persons to conspire and agree wrongfully and wickedly to commit any crime punishable by imprisonment in the state prison. Another act had. provided that whoever should obtain goods, &c., by false pretenses, should be punished by imprisonment (in the state prison being understood) not more than seven years, or by fine not exceeding five hundred dollars. It was held that the crimes referred to in the act first above quoted meant such as were liable to be thus punished, and that defendant came within its range by a combination to cheat and defraud against the provisions of the second, although the crime which they intended, might have been punished by fine alone.

A similar doctrine has obtained in Missouri, although their statutory definition of a felony seems from the reported cases, to include all offences which “may” be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary. They are not authorities, therefore, on the point under discussion, but may be noticed, en passant, somewhat digressively, as bearing on this case in another way. It is held there not only that offences which may be punished by the penitentiary are felonies, but that the Legislature had wisely “ left it to the discretion of the jury, in many of-fences, to inflict the punishment of imprisonment in the penitentiary, or fine, or imprisonment in the county jail,” but that though this discretion is given to the juries they are still felonies. See Cases in 7th Missouri of Johnson v. State p. 183 and Ingram v. State p. 293.

Returning to the construction of our definition of “ felony.” A ruling was made in Georgia in the civil case of Chandler v. Johnson et al, 39 Ga. p.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Ark. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-waller-ark-1884.