24 Ark. 185 | Ark. | 1866
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an application to review the decision of the circuit court of Saline county at the March term 1866, refusing to grant the petitioner bail. The case is exhibited here by a duly certified transcript of the record which contains the whole case including tbe indictment for murder in tbe first degree, with tbe evidence adduced on tbe motion for bail, and tbe opinion of tbe court overruling said motion. Tbe petitioner also alleges that tbe judge of said circuit court of Saline county is now absent from tbe state, as petitioner is advised and believes, to remain absent several months.
Tbe case of Good et al., ex parte, 19 Ark., page 410, is referred to by petitioner in support of bis application to review the decision below and grant him bail. In that case it is held that, if upon tbe bearing of an application for bail, tbe circuit court or judge refuse to admit tbe prisoner to bail, upon a proper application to this court, and showing of tbe facts on which tbe judge acted, if tbe showing be deemed sufficient, a certiorari would be awarded to bring up a transcript of tbe papers and proceedings upon tbe application for bail, for revision, and if it was determined that tbe prisoner was entitled to bail, this court might bring him before it by habeas corpus, and admit him to bail, or if deemed more convenient, direct the circuit judge by tbe proper mandate to do so. Regarding this decision as fully sustaining tbe authority of this court to x’eview tbe decision of tbe court below in this case, and to grant bail if there is manifest error, tbe question for this court to determine is, is there manifest error in the decision of tbe court below overruling the application for bail.
Tbe offence charged is murder in tbe first degree, which is not bailable. It is claimed in tbe petition that tbe facts do not show that tbe prisoner bad pre-meditated tbe killing when he went to tbe bouse of deceased with bis gun; but that the killing was more probably from a sudden determination formed after bis arrival there, and brought on by the unfortunate and untimely interference of the wife of tbe deceased, and that tbe offence charged can only amount to murder in tbe second degree at most and therefore bailable.
Tbe case is substantially this. Tbe petitioner, George Osborn is charged with tbe murder of Joseph Price, on tbe Ith day of March, 1866, in tbe county of Saline. They bad bad a difficulty of not many days standing. The deceased had accused prisoner of stealing his meat, and with extremely rough language, had declared that he, the deceased, would hill the prisoner before sun-down of the very day on which it turned out that he himself was hilled by the prisoner, or before the next morning, saying that prisoner had stolen enough of the deceased’s lard to grease his way to hell. One of the witnesses was so impressed with the earnestness of these threats-that she even deceived the deceased as to where prisoner then was, giving as a.reason for-that- deception, -that she feared the deceased would slip around and hill the prisoner (the petitioner here) before she could put him on his guard. She testifies, however, that she found the prisoner and informed him of these threats by deceased. It is in-proof that deceased was fully armed and mahing visible demonstrations to carry his threats into execution. The prisoner, with full knowledge of these threats and demonstrations, prepares himself with a gun and goes to the house of the deceased, instead of remaining away lihe one determined to act only on the defensive. He went there too, about sun-down of the day on which, according to the threats, his own life was to terminate. He goes directly to the door of the house in which deceased was sitting down, with his gun in hand raised as if to fire, and says:. “ Joe, this is the time.” Deceased says: “ what did you say, George,” at the same time rising and advancing towards the prisoner, his pistol being on a table in the room, and gun in rack over the door— the wife of the deceased immediately interposing and getting hold of the gun in the hands of the prisoner: prisoner says: “ get out of the way Esther, or I will put this load in you;” and only delaying the shot long enough to pugh aside the woman, fired the fatal shot. Deceased fell on the fire and expired in a few minutes.
The question is, what did prisoner go to the house of the deceased for? Was it, or was it not to kill the deceased ? The question is not whether prisoner thought that, under the law and facts, he would be justified in killing deceased; but whether, according to tbe evidence, he went to the house of the deceased on that day determined to kill him.
It is contended that the facts warrant the conclusion that the determination on part of petitioner was only, under a demonstration of arms, to bring about an adjustment, and that the determination to kill was only formed after his arrival there, and precipitated by the foolish and inopportune conduct of the wife of deceased; and that, therefore, the case could only be murder in the second degree and bailable.
The court below thought otherwise and this court is called upon, from the facts stated, to say there is manifest error in the ruling of the court below in refusing bail.
The counsel for petitioner refers, also, to the case of Pitman vs. The State, 22d Ark., 364, as a case furnishing authority for the hypothesis that this case is one in which the court below should have granted bail. A close examination shows a very marked difference in the two cases. These threats were mutual, and each party had been seeking the other with deadly weapons, and when Thompson, the deceased in that case, was fired upon by Pitman, he was himself advancing with a double-barrel gun towards Pit-man, and as he halted some 40 yards from Pitman, received the fatal shot from Pitman’s gun. The cases, then, are entirely dissimilar.
This court, on a careful examination of all the testimony in this case, cannot say that there was manifest error in the court below in refusing bail to petitioner. The motion for habeas corpus is therefore overruled.