58 Ark. 47 | Ark. | 1893
The appellant, Evans, was indicted by a grand jury of the Union circuit court for murder. On his motion the venue was changed from Union to Ouachita county, where he was tried in the circuit court, and convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment was fixed at twenty-one years in the penitentiary.
Appellant insisted that Judge Duffie had no right or was disqualified to preside in his trial because of Judge Smith’s relationship to the deceased. How this could disqualify Judge Duffie we are unable to understand. The constitution authorized them to temporarily exchange circuits or hold courts for each other under the regulations prescribed by law ; and the statute empowered them to exchange circuits or hold courts for each other for such leng'th of time as seemed to them practicable and to the best interest of their respective circuits and courts. The disqualification of one to preside in causes pending in his courts or the impropriety of his so doing might well have been a good cause or reason for the exchange. In exchanging- circuits they had the right to fix the time according to what in that respect seemed to them practicable and to the best interest of their respective circuits and courts. When the exchange was made, the law did not limit the right of either to preside in trials to those wherein the regular judge was not dis"qualified. The disqualification of one did not attach to the other or affect his qualification.
The indictment of the appellant was as follows : “The grand jury of Union county, in the name and by the authority of the State of Arkansas, on oath accuse-the defendants, John Evans and Dick Neyman, of the crime of murder, committed as follows, to-wit: The
said defendant, on the first day of May, 1892, iu Union county, Arkansas, did unlawfully, wilfully, feloniously, and of their malice aforethought, and with premeditation and deliberation, assault, kill and murder one Henry Wamble, in the peace of the State, by shooting him, the-said Wamble, with a gun loaded with gun-powder and leaden bullets, which said gun was then and there a. deadly weapon, and in the hands of them, the said John Evans and Dick Neyman, had and held, with the felonious intent, and with malice aforethought and with deliberation and premeditation, him, the said Henry Wamble, to kill and murder, against the peace, etc.”
Appellant demurred to it for the following reasons :■
1st. “That in said indictment the defendant and Dick Neyman are accused of the crime of murder, but that only one of them is charged with the acts constituting the offense, and which one is not shown.”
2nd. “ That the defendant and Dick Neyman are-alleged to have had in their hands only one gun, by and through the instrumentality of which only they are-alleged to have taken the life of Henry Wamble.”
In the trial evidence was adduced tending to prove, among other facts, the following: On the 29th of March, 1892, “ a warrant was placed in the hands of the deceased, Henry Wamble, who was a deputy sheriff, for the arrest of the appellant and Dick Neyman, upon a charge of murder. The deceased summoned a posse to aid in making the arrest,” and on the next day, about or little before sunrise, they went to the house of Neyman and entered it and found signs of its having been occupied the previous night. As they came out of the back door the appellant and Neyman were discovered about 75 or 80 yards from the house, retreating- to the woods. The deceased called to them several times to halt, and they stopped, leveled their guns, and a general firing-followed on both sides. After the shooting the appellant and Neyman escaped into the woods, and the deceased was found lying on the ground fatally wounded, a ball having- entered just above the left hip joint, ranged backward and a little downward, and lodged in the spinal column.”
The statement of the deceased was admitted as evidence over the objections of the appellant. He insists that it was not admissible, because it was not made under a sense of impending death, and with the prospect of almost immediate dissolution.
The declarations of a person who has been wounded, respecting the circumstances under which the wound was inflicted, are admissible in prosecutions for the killing of such person, if made at a time when he did not expect to survive the injury, and all hope of recovery had been supplanted by the conviction that he would certainly die. The time when made need not be when the declarant apprehended immediate dissolution. But they are admissible if made at any time when he believed that death was impending and certain. Dunn v. State, 2 Ark. 229, 246, 247; Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (8th ed.), secs. 276-284 and cases cited.
It is within the province of the court to hear the circumstances under which the declarations were made and to determine whether they are admissible. But after they are admitted it is within the province of the jury to weig'h them and the circumstances under which they were made, and give to them only such credit, upon the whole evidence, as they may think they deserve. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 160; Dunn v. State, 2 Ark. 247.
We think that the circumstances under which the declarations in question were made were sufficient to warrant the court in admitting them.
Appellant’s excuse for shooting at Wamble and his posse was, he mistook them for a mob seeking to inflict on him some great injury. He sought to sustain his testimony on this point by the rejected testimony. The facts he proposed to prove by Bishop and Scarborough could not have added to his fears of a mob and in this respect sustained the theory of his defense unless they had been communicated to him before the shooting*, and there was no evidence that they were. They did not tend to show the existence of a mob, since the evidence in the whole case only tended to prove that one man proposed to form a mob, and he did not undertake to hang or drive him out of the country, unless others would assist. Appellant did not propose to attack the veracity of Goode, but simply to “substantiate” his own testimony. Under such circumstances we do not think the court abused its discretion in refusing to allow him to introduce the excluded testimony for the purpose of substantiating his testimony at the time when the testimony in behalf of both parties had been closed.
Many instructions were given over the objections of the appellant, and many were asked by him and modified by interlineations and erasures and given as modified. We have examined all of them carefully, and given to them due consideration, and find, when considered and construed as a whole, as the court expressly instructed the jury to do, no error in them as given, and in the refusal to give them as asked, prejudicial to appellant.
The verdict returned into court was : “We the jury find the defendant, John B. Fvans, guilty of murder in the second degree, and assess his punishment at twenty-one years in the State penitentiary. C. S. Keith, Foreman.” The omission of the words “in manner and form as charged in the indictment” did not affect its validity. Dixon v. State, 29 Ark. 171.
The evidence was sufficient to sustain the verdict.
Judg-ment affirmed.