Vaughan v. State

20 S.W. 588, 57 Ark. 1, 1892 Ark. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 3, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 20 S.W. 588 (Vaughan 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
Vaughan v. State, 20 S.W. 588, 57 Ark. 1, 1892 Ark. LEXIS 80 (Ark. 1892).

Opinion

Cockriee, C. J.

The appellant was indicted as. accessory before the fact to murder in the first degree. He was convicted and sentenced to be hung. His motion for a new trial assigns numerous g-rounds for there versal of the judgment.

1. One of the grounds assigned for new trial and argued here is that the judgment should be reversed because of improper influence brought to bear upon the jury to obtain a verdict. It is said that the evidence of' this influence is reached from two distinct sources : first, that it is found in a certificate of the executive and ministerial officers of the court, which is embodied in the bill of exceptions, showing that when the final arg-ument of the State’s attorney in prosecuting the case against the appellant was concluded, it was followed by “loud, general and continuous applause for some-moments by the citizens of Washington and Madison counties,” who filled the court house to its full capacity at the trial; and second, that it is found in the affidavit of J. W. Walker, which was considered by the court upon the application for a new trial. This affidavit is to the effect that the cause was submitted to the jury on Saturday, and that they brought in no verdict on that day; that on Sunday they were given the liberty of the court room, the doors and windows of which stood open ; that some of the jurors left the court room and remained some upon the north and some upon the south porch of the court house; that divers citizens of Washington and Madison counties were in the court house yard, within fifteen or eighteen feet of the jurors, excitedly discussing the merits of the case against the appellant; that the affiant, who was one of the attorneys for the appellant, sought the trial judge, and reported these facts to him, but that thereafter “the crowd remained within fifteen or eighteen feet of the jurors who were trying- the case, excitedly discussing the case and insisting upon the guilt of the defendant; Vaughan ; and that this was kept up for hours after the affiant called the attention of the court to the facts.”

Of the certificate of the officers, it is sufficient to say that it is the province of the trial judge, and not of the executive and ministerial officers of the court, to certify to this court the facts in reference to matters which occur in court in the presence of the judge on the trial of a cause. It is only where the judg-e refuses to certify in the bill of exceptions the facts complained of that a party can resort to the statutory method of a certificate of bystanders, supported by affidavits. Fordyce v. Jackson, 56 Ark. 594.

1. Affidavits of

The judge did not refuse to certify any fact or exception in this case. The certificate of bystanders is therefore extra-judicial, and cannot be considered by us.

The affidavit of Walker directs attention to matters which did not occur in court in the course of the trial. The judge himself could obtain information about them only through the testimony of others. Affidavits are admissible for that purpose, and, when considered by the trial court and brought upon the record by bill of exceptions, questions presented by them are brought before us on appeal. That is familiar practice.

% Exposure of jury to improper inllu-

If the jury were really subjected for hours to the influence of an excited crowd of men who discussed the merits of the controversy and demanded the guilt of the prisoner in their hearing, the integrity and purity of the trial would of course be impeached, and a new trial, freed from all bias and undue influence, would be the least reparation that the law could make in behalf of justice.

The onty doubt that arises on this branch of the cause is whether there is not some mistake, omission or defect in the record ; for we know that the judge who tried the cause is careful, conscientious and capable. Facts and circumstances which do not appear of record, and which made the matter clear to his mind, were perhaps known to him; but there is no intimation of them in the record, and we can try the cause only upon the record as it exists. By the well established practice, acted upon in this court in many cases, the unimpeached affidavit made a frima facie case that some or all the jurors had been exposed to improper influence, and it cast upon the prosecution the burden of showing that the jury had not been so exposed, or that the exposure was of a character that could not or did not influence them. The officer in charge of the jury, persons about the court house on the day in question, and the jurors themselves were all competent witnesses to disprove the statements of the affidavit if they were inaccurate or untrue. When the means of contradiction were so easily to be obtained, we must infer that the statements of the affidavit are true, else the proof to the contrary would be forthcoming. To presume that the judge knew other facts than those set out in the record would be contrary to the authorities and the practice in such cases, and would establish a precedent that would lead to dangerous results.

The judgment convicting Maclin of murder in the first degree was reversed upon the unimpeached and uncontradicted affidavit of one person to the effect that one of the jurors had remained for some time in the hearing of comments on the case made by bystanders. Maclin v. State, 44 Ark. 115. Judge Smith, in delivering the opinion, said: “Here no effort was made to deny, exculpate or explain the misconduct of this juror, or to show that it was not hurtful to the appellant, although it was in the power of the State to produce him and the officer under whose eye he was.” He goes on to say that consequently it must be taken as an uncontroverted fact that the juror was subjected to improper influence, and that that fact vitiated the verdict. Other cases of like import could be cited, but the question is at rest in this State. The practice rests upon no technical ground, for it is of the first importance that no verdict should stand in the face of facts calculated to throw doubt and suspicion upon the fairness of the trial. As was said by Judge Fairchild in Love v. State, 22 Ark. 336: “The safeguard of the law must be well protected, that the just punishment of the guilty may not be a precedent or excuse for the illegal conviction of the innocent.” A new trial ought, therefore, to have been granted.

It is important to consider further such questions only as may arise on another trial.

2. The special term of the Madison circuit court was legally held. Section 1476 of Mansfield’s Digest provides: “Special adjourned sessions of any court may be held in continuation of the regular term, upon its being so ordered by the court or judg'e in term time, and entered by the clerk on the record of the court; ’ ’ and section 1481 provides : “No such adjourned session or special term shall interfere with any other court to be held by the same judg'e.”

3. Adjourned session, oí

In construing these sections it has been decided that the circuit court may provide for a special adjourned term to be held after the time for holding- the next regular term in another county of the circuit; and that an adjourning the court to a given day is a sufficient entry upon the record of an order for an adjourned session. Galbreath v. Mitchell, 32 Ark. 278; Davies v. State, 39 id. 448.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.W. 588, 57 Ark. 1, 1892 Ark. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-v-state-ark-1892.