Upon trial by jury the appellant was found guilty of first-degree rape and was sentenced to a 40-year prison term. Two points for reversal are argued.
First, Duncan testified in his own defense. On cross-examination the prosecutor inquired about Duncan’s guilt in a number of earlier instances, this being a typical question: “In March, the 7th of 1954, in Sacramento, California, were you guilty of burglary?” Duncan denied his guilt with respect to all the offenses except a battery committed in California on July 8, 1953. Upon objection the prosecutor admitted, in chambers, that his questions were taken partly from an F.B.I. “rap sheet”, but that document was not displayed to the jury.
It does not appear from the record before us that the questions were improper. An accused may be asked in good faith, on cross-examination, if he is guilty of having committed a named criminal offense, though he cannot be asked if he was indicted or accused of a crime. Moore v. State,
It is also argued that the supposed offenses were too remote in time to have any bearing upon Duncan’s credibility. Our cases have not been completely harmonious upon this issue of remoteness. We do not explore the matter, however, because the judgment must be reversed upon another ground. At the retrial the newly adopted Uniform Rules of Evidence will be in force, because new procedural statutes ordinarily apply to pending cases. DeLong v. Green,
Secondly, a reversal is sought on the basis of a juror’s having read a newspaper account that was published on the morning of the second day of the trial. The story, which appeared in a Jonesboro newspaper (where the case was being tried), contained this statement: “During a lengthy cross examination, Burnett read from a three page Federal Bureau, of Investigation rap sheet listing Duncan’s arrests dating back to 1953.” When the issue was raised upon a resumption of the trial, one juror admitted that he had read the article (although the jurors had been instructed not to read newspaper reports of the trial). In response to questions by the court — questions that were understandably very leading — the juror said that he could put the newspaper account entirely out of his mind and not be influenced by it in any manner. The defense motion for a mistrial was overruled.
The motion should have been granted, especially in view of the earlier protracted cross-examination based upon the rap sheet. The State, in arguing that the court’s ruling was right, relies upon our holding in Howell v. State,
Reversed.
