60 Fla. 22 | Fla. | 1910
The plaintiff in error was indicted, tried and convicted for the crime of murder in the first degree in the circuit court for Duval county, and sentenced to death, and brings this judgment here for review by writ of error.
The first assignment of error that we shall notice is the denial of the defendant’s motion in arrest of judgment. This motion was predicated on the following state of facts: The grand jury that presented the indictment against the defendant, having completed their labors had been discharged by the court, but during the same term of the court, by an order of the court, were recalled, reempanelled and resworn, and then investigated the case against the defendant and found and returnedi the indictment upon which he was tried. It is contended here that the trial judge should by a formal order have first vacated in terms his former order discharging the grand jury, and then have ordered their recall. This contention is hyper-technical and cannot be sustained. The.formal order made by the judge recalling the grand jury and requiring them to reassemble and re-empanelling and reswearing them was tantamount to a vacation of the former order discharging them. That it is lawful and proper for a grand jury that has been discharged or dismissed by the court to be recalled and reassembled during the same term of the court, and that indictments then returned by them are validi, is abundantly sustained by the authorities. 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, p. 1298; 20 Cyc. 1324; Hayes v.
The next assignment of error that we will discuss is the denial of the defendant’s motion for new trial made upon the ground that the verdict of conviction is not supported by the evidence in the cause. We have carefully considered the entire evidence adduced and are of opinion that it sustains the verdict returned. Upon the question of premeditated design, it was shown in evidence that the defendant for a week before the homicide had harbored ill feeling toward the deceased because of a petty indebtedness of fifty cents that he claimed the deceased owed him, and that it was chiefly because of this that he committed the act of killing him.
Finding no error, the judgment of the circuit court in
Parkhill thinks this a case of manslaughter.