| Ark. | May 15, 1888

CockRILL, C. J.

The defendant was indicted and tried for murder. The jury returned the following verdict, viz: “ We, the jury, find the defendant.guilty of manslaughter, but cannot agree upon the punishment.” The court sentenced him to three years and six month’s imprisonment in the penetentiary. Several grounds for a new trial assigned in the motion filed for that purpose find no support in the bill of exceptions, and need not be noticed. Among these is the overruling of the motion for a continuance, which is argued by counsel. '

It is coniended by the appellant that the evidence adduced at the trial leads to but one of two conclusions, that is, that the killing was murder in the first degree or justifiable homicide, and, therefore, that the jury could not legally return a verdict of manslaughter. Conceding the premises to be correct, the conclusion does not follow.

Where the evidence and the instructions of the court demand a verdict of murder, but the jury finds manslaughter, there is no alternative but to sentence the prisoner accordingly. 2 Bishop Cr. Pr., sec. 642. Such is the effect of the judgments in Allen v. State, 37 Ark., 435; and Green v. State, 38 Ib., 310.

The principle of those cases is that the court cannot withhold from the jury the power to return a verdict according to their will for any grade of the offense charged against a defendant. The courts can only instruct juries as to their duty, giving them in charge the law applicable to the facts and no other. If there is no evidence whatever tending to establish a lower grade of homicide than murder in one instance, or voluntary manslaughter in another, the court should decline to give to the jury directions as to any lower grade of homicide (Benton v. State, 30 Ark.,328; Allen v. State, Sup.), and it is the jury’s duty to take the court’s exposition of the law as that applicable to the case. But the court cannot direct a verdict for the higher offense nor restrain the jury from returning it for the lower grade. Flynn v. State, 48 Ark., 289; Adams v. State, 29 Ohio St., 412" date_filed="1876-12-15" court="Ohio" case_name="Adams v. State">29 Ohio St., 412.

In this case the court, in the course of the charge, read to the jury the statute defining voluntary manslaughter, but said nothing about the lower grade of the offense. There-was no exception to the charge upon that score, and no request to charge otherwise. There was not a scintilla of evidence-tending to show that the offense of involuntary manslaughter had been committed. It would have been inappropriate,, therefore, to have charged the jury upon that offense. It is argued that it was error to charge as to manslaughter at all. The appellant acquiesced in that parr of the charge at a time when it seemed favorable to him, and he cannot be heard to-complain now.

But it is said the court erred in passing sentence on the defendant as for voluntary manslaughter. The verdict did not designate the degree of manslaughter, or assess the punishment. The duty of fixing the penalty devolved, therefore, upon the court. Mansf. Dig., sec. 2308. On conviction of murder the statute requires the degree of the offense to be found by the jury. Mansf. Dig., sec. 2284; Thompson v. State, 26 Ark., 323; Ford v. State, 34 Ib., 602. It is not so as to manslaughter-r — it is only necessary that the court should have a certain guide to the intention of the jury. Verdicts receive a reasonable construction in order to reach the jury’s meaning, and when that is found, they are enforced as though the intention was express. Strawn v. State, 14 Ark., 549. Viewing the verdict in this case in the light of the evidence and the court’s charge, the conclusion is reasonable, if not irresistible, that the jury intended a conviction of voluntary manslaughter. The court had charged them specifically upon that offense and had made no mention of involuntary manslaughter. If they knew there was such a grade of homicide, it is not probable that they understood that the defendant could be convicted of it in this prosecution, A. verdict of involuntary manslaughter would have been inappropriate to the evidence, and the jury would have been unmindful of their duty to have returned such a verdict. In the absence of an expression to the contrary, a presumption of an intention to violate a duty is not indulged against a juror more than any other officer. The evidence certainly warranted a verdict of murder in the first degree; that the jury did not intend to acquit is shown by the verdict. If it be conceded that the verdict ought not properly to have been for voluntary manslaughter, that affords no reason for indulging the presumption that the jury intended a greater wrong than they have expressed.

In the cases of McPherson v. State, 29 Ark., 225 ; Winkler v. State, 82 Ib., 552; and Brown v. State, 34 Ib., 232, verdicts of manslaughter were returned without the degree of the offense being specified. In each case it was ruled that if the intention of the jury was manifest, a sentence of voluntary manslaughter would be sustained. In the first ease the intention was held to be manifested by two facts : (1) That the evidence did not tend to prove the second degree of the offense, and (2) by the period of imprisonment fixed by the verdict. The sentence for voluntary manslaughter was approved and the judgment affirmed.

In Winkler’s case, the verdict fixed the punishment above the maximum for involuntary manslaughter, and the court said, “ The penalty clearly indicates the purpose” to convict of voluntary manslaughter. The judgment was reversed for other reasons.

In Brown’s case these decisions were approved. The judgment was. reversed because the court did not inform the jury that the prisoner might be convicted of involuntary manslaughter when the evidence made a case for such action.

In the case of Welsh v. State, 50 Ga., 128" date_filed="1873-07-15" court="Ga." case_name="Welch v. State">50 Ga., 128, a sentence for voluntary manslaughter upon a verdict of “ guilty of manslaughter ” generally was sustained, the court holding that on a trial for murder, if the jury intend to find the killing involuntary, or without the intention to kill; the presumption is they would say so ; and that “ guilty of manslaughter ” means guilty of voluntary manslaughter. See Conkey v. People, 1 Abbot’s Ct. App., Dec. 418; Curtis v. State, 26 Ark., 439; Proffatt Jury Trial, sec. 427.

We think the intention of the jury to return a verdict of voluntary manslaughter is manifested in this case within the principle of the three Arkansas cases above cited.

It is the better practice, in every case where the verdict is not complete on its face, for the judge to point out its defects before receiving it; to inquire of the jury what their intention is, and show them how to perfect it. Ford v. State, supra; 1 Bishop Cr. Pr., sec. 1004.

The defendant has not been prejudiced in this case, and the judgment is affirmed.

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