Thompson v. State

26 Ark. 323
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 26 Ark. 323 (Thompson 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
Thompson v. State, 26 Ark. 323 (Ark. 1870).

Opinion

Harrison, J.

The appellant was indicted in the Johnson circuit court, at the September term, 1870, for the murder of David 0. Stillwell.,

The indictment was as follows:

“Johnson Circuit Court.
“The State of Arkansas
against
“Joseph Thompson.
Murder.
“ The grand jury of the county of Johnson, in the name and.' by the authority of the State of Arkansas, accuse Joseph Thompson of the crime of murder, committed as follows, to-wit: The said Joseph Thompson, on the 14th day of May A. P. 1870, in the county of Johnson, in the State aforesaid, did premeditatedly, willfully and maliciously, with double-barreled shot-guu, loaded with gunpowder and leaden bullets, kill and murder one David C. Stillwell, against the peace and dignity ■of the State of Arkansas.
“T. M. Gibson, Prosecuting Atty. pro tern.”

The defendant applied for .a change of venue, and the case was removed to the county of Yell.

At the November term, 1870, of the circuit court of that •county, he was put upon his trial and the jury returned the following verdict:

“We, the jury, find the defendant guilty, as charged in the indictment.”

He moved for a new trial, hut his motion was overruled, and j udgment and sentence of death were pronounced against him.

Various'exceptions were reserved by the defendant, in the course of the proceedings, and assigned as grounds for a new trial; but, as it appears from his bill of exceptions, that much •of the evidence was not preserved, and that it contains only •such as was deemed most important, such of them as were predicated upon the evidence cannot he considered by us; for it would be impossible to determine, without having the whole of the evidence before us, whether they were well taken or not; but must presume that the decisions of the court were •correctly made, according to the maxim, omnium praesumuntur rite et solcmniter esse acta donee probetur in contrarium.

The first ground of the motion was the refusal of the court to allow a continuance of the case.

The defendant made two applications for a continuance. The first on the 15th day of November, on account of the absence ■of certain of his witnesses and counsel. The court, upon overruling this, set the case for trial on the 20th, in order, as the bill of exceptions states, to afford the defendant an opportunity to procure the attendance of his witnesses.

On the 23d of the same month, he'made the second application, on account of the absence of other witnesses, and two of the same. No other facts or circumstances of the case were stated, in liis motion than those he alleged ho expected to prove by the absent witnesses, which were, in substance, that the deceased was a violent, turbulent and dangerous man, who commonly went armed, and who boasted of having killed one or two men; that on several occasions, shortly before the killing, he made threats against the life of the defendant, and that he and his brother, Green Stillwell, and brother-in-law, P. IT. Morgan, had actually formed a conspiracy to kill him, which facts were well known to the defendant before the deceased was killed.

It would seem reasonable to presume that the defendant’s last motion for a continuance set forth all. the grounds for it that then existed. The exception taken to the refusal of his former application must, therefore, be considered as waived by the latter.

The granting of continuances in criminal, as well as in civil cases, is, as a general proposition, within the sound discretion of the court, and its refusal to allow a continuance, is, therefore, never ground for a new trial, unless it clearly appears to have been an abuse of such discretion, and manifestly operates as a denial of justice. The motion for the continuance, not setting forth the facts or circumstances tending to prove that the killing of the deceased was in necessary self-defense, or otherwise show the relevancy or materiality of the testimony of the absent witnesses to the defendant’s defense, no prejudice or injury appears to have resulted to him from the denial of the continuance.

The other grounds of the motion, that we are called upon to notice, and which may be considered together, are:

First. That the officer in charge of the jury was not sworn to keep them together, and to suffer no person to speak to or communicate with them on any subject connected with the trial, during the adjournment of the court.

Second. That the jury were not admonished by the court, at its adjournment, that it was their duty not to permit any one to speak to or communicate with them on anv subject con-neeted with the trial, and that they should not converse among themselves on any subject connected with the trial, or form, or express any opinion thereon, until the cause was finally submitted to them.

Third. That three of the jurors, each on a different occasion, separated themselves from the panel, and went from the jury room, in company with an officer who had not been sworn as required by the statute, the others, meanwhile, remaining without an officer in charge of them.

Courts certainly should be very careful to protect the jury from every improper influence; and the provisions of the Code, designed for that purpose, should never be disregarded. These provisions are, however, directory and cautionary only, and a-failure to comply with them will not absolutely, or without some evidence that some prejudice or injury has resulted to the defendant, in consequence of an omission to comply with them? vitiate the verdict, and be cause for a new trial.

The conclusion to be derived from the former decisions of this court, and which seems to be well supported by the authorities, as to the consequence of the misconduct of jur_y, in cases of mere exposure to improper influences, we understand to be this: Where evidence is adduced, and shows that the jury were not, in any way, influenced, biased or prejudiced by the exposure, the verdict will not be disturbed; but unless it is proven that it failed of an effect, the presumption will be against the purity of the trial, and the verdict will he set aside.

But it does not appear that there was any direct exposure. The jurors, who left the panel, were accompanied by the officer in charge of them, who, we must presume, did his duty and kept them out of the way of all improper influences; and there is no reason for supposing the others might have been exposed to any during his absence.

The motion for a new trial, we think, was properly over-' ruled; but our attention is directed to the verdict and the in-dietment. The jury did not find, by their verdict, the degree of murder of which they found the defendant guilty.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Ark. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-state-ark-1870.