Wilson v. State

16 Ark. 601
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 16 Ark. 601 (Wilson 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
Wilson v. State, 16 Ark. 601 (Ark. 1855).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff in error was indicted for larceny in the Arkansas Circuit Court. In the first count, he was charged with stealing a lot of bacon, of the value of ten dollars, the property of one Friend, whose given name was to the jurors unknown.

In the second the only variation was, that the bacon was the property of one Mary A. Friend. This was quashed on motion of the prosecuting attorney.

The accused being in custody of the sheriff, was brought into court where the indictment was read to him in proper person, his counsel being also present; and upon demand, whether or not lie was guilty, put in a plea of which the following is a copy, to wit:

«STATE OE ARKANSAS, ) vs. > La/roony. GILBERT M. WlLSON. j
IN THE ARKANSAS OlRCuiT CoüRT, APRIL TERM, A. D. 1855.
Comes said defendant in proper person and defends, &c., and prays judgment of the indictment, and that the same be quashed, because he says, that at tigs present term of this court, the grand 'jury found a bill of indictment for the same offence charged in this indictment, and he was put upon his trial before the court, sitting as a jury, when after hearing the evidence and argument of counsel the court directed anon-suit, against the objection of de- ■ fendant, and this he is ready to verify; wherefore, he prays judgment of the said indictment, and that the same be quashed.
G. M. WILSON.
“I, Gilbert M. Wilson, do solemnly swear that the matters set forth in the foregoing plea,, are true,, so help me God.
G. M. WILSON.
Sworn to before me, this 25th day of April, A. D. 1855.
J. G. Quateraious, Clerk.”

To this plea the State interposed a demurrer which the court sustained and the accused excepted.

The record then proceeds, as follows, to wit: “And the defendant refused to plead further, but stands mute, and the court enters a plea of not guilty, to which theState joins issue; and, by consent, this cause is submitted to the court sitting as a jury, and the court, after hearing the evidence, and hearing the argument of counsel, found the defendant guilty of larceny; whereupon, it is considered by the court, that the said Gilbert M. Wilson, be taken from lionce to the City of Little Sock, in the State of Arkansas, there to be confined in the jail and penitentiary house of the State of Arkansas, there to be confined at labor for the time and term of two years from this date.

To all of which finding and judgment of the court, the defendant at the time excepted, and filed his bill of exceptions,” &c.

This bill of exceptions, after setting out that upon this “case coming on, and the defendant’s plea in abatement having been held bad, on demurrer, and the plea of not guilty having been entered by the court, sitting as a jury, Oaldy was introduced as a witness on the part of the State, testified,” &c.

The substance of this testimony was, that about the 1st of March, 1855, in Arkansas county, Mrs. Friend, whose, reputed husband had been absent some two months, came to the witness crying, and said her meat had been stolen; whereupon, he went to her house, and finding that the hinges of her smoke-house had been cut, he took the trail of some persons, and after following it about two hundred yards, found some salt and meat strings on a pile of cord wood, and from thence pursued the trail to a camp, where he found the defendant, apparently asleep, and another person, who was awake and attempted to run out by the witness. In this camp the witness found, covered with some boards, two or three hundred pounds of bacon, and some venison hams, worth $10. The two men had a jug of liquor, and appeared to be intoxicated. The witness took them in custody, and conveyed them to the Post of Arkansas, having first induced them to send the meat to Mrs. Friend, by a man named Robertson, Witness did not know the Christian name of the plaintiff in error.

The only additional testimony introduced, was that of a Mr. Haller, who was one of the grand jury who found the bill. lie simply testified that the Christian name of Friend, was unknown to the grand jury.

This is the whole case, as it appears in the record. There was no motion in arrest of judgment, or for a new trial, no exceptions to any ruling of tbe court in admitting or rejecting testimony, and nothing to show any opinion or ruling of the court, as to any point of law, otherwise than as we have already stated. And, therefore, it cannot be known whether or hot, in arriving at the verdict in this case, the court found according to the weight of evidence, without any misconception as to any point of law; and, hence, in the absence of any means, whereby the plaintiff in error could have, by exceptions, put his finger upon any error of law, not now upon the face of this record, all proper presumptions are in favor of the verdict and judgment. Irrespeotive of any such supposed errors, however,°the plaintiff in error assigns, as upon the face of this record; 1st. That the court below erred in sustaining the demurrer to his plea. 2d. In proceeding to hear evidence and to try the issue upon the plea of not guilty, put in by the court for the defendant below, upon his standing mute ; and in rendering judgment against him upon the supposed verdict of guilty, so found against him, he excepting thereto at the time.

With regard to the question raised by the first assignment, the plea was clearly bad, according to the principles of law governing such pleas, so fully expounded in the case of Atkins vs. The State, just decided, that it is unnecessary to do more than refer to the opinion in that case as to this point, keeping in mind, that the jeopardy, attempted to be set up in this case, was incurred on another record, while in the case of Atkins it was upon the same record on which he was still held to answer.

The other assignment presents a new question in this court, which is not without difficulty ; mainly, however, because a practice has grown up in this State, to what extent we are not accurately informed, to submit by consent, issues of not guilty, in cases of misdemeanors at least, to the trial and judgment of the Circuit Court, sitting as a jury, as is expressly authorized by our statute in cases on the civil side of the court.

In the cases of Guess vs. The State, 1 Eng. R. 147; Rector vs. The State, ib. 187; Robinson vs. The State, 2 Eng. R. 122; McBride vs. The State, 2 Eng. 374, tins practice seems to have been tacitly allowed by this court, and may possibly have been in other cases not developed in our printed reports. We have not, however, found any such case, in some examination of these volumes, on a charge of felony, at-the common law,, or for that grado of crime since the passage of our statute defining felony in this State.

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16 Ark. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-state-ark-1855.