Hathcock v. State

99 Ark. 65 | Ark. | 1911

Hart, J.

Upon information filed by the deputy prosecuting attorney, appellant was arrested and tried before a justice of the peace of Boone County for the offense of carrying a pistol as a weapon. From a judgment of conviction he appealed to the circuit court. There he was again convicted, and has appealed to this court.

The testimony for the State shows that appellant some time in the summer or fall of 1910 ran down out of his office in the town of Harrison in Boone County into the street, and threatened some boys with whom he was angry. One ¡witness said he saw the pistol sticking out of his pocket when he went on the street, and another said it was a 38-calibre pistol.

The appellant testified: “That some time in the summer or fall Virgil Jones, Roy Woods and Cat Keeton were across the street from his office, at the Pool Hall, and that he was sitting by a window in his office working on his books and some notes, when those boys began calling him names from across there; that hie apparently did not notice them, although they kept this up for about ten minutes; that a lady came ¡to his office to have a bone felon upon her thumb treated, and that as she started up the stairway Cat called at her, ‘Don’t go up there,’ and I still did not say anything. When she came into the office, I saw that she was scared, but I had her sit down and commenced to treat her •thumb. This fellow, Keeton, came across the street and hallooed up the stairway, ‘Come down out of there!’ and when he did that I got so terribly mad that I got my pistol and went down on to the street. I went down there to shoot him if he did not go away, and as I ran down the stairs pretty fast I may have got out on to the street, although I did not intend to. The pistol was not loaded. It was an old pistol that had been in my office for at least five years, and a day or two before this occurred, owing to some trouble I was having with these boys, I had occasion to look up the pistol, and it would hot turn, and I could not open it, so I went across to the printing office and got Stanley Crandiall to come up to my office and open the pistol for me, and he took the loads out and dropped them into the drawer. The pistol would not work, and I said I must take it to the house and grease it; I took if home, and got it into pretty good shape, and the next morning when I came back to the office there was some one waiting on the steps for me and went right into the office with me, and I just laid the pistol back in the desk drawer, and never thought of it again until this occurrence, and I grabbed it out of the drawer again, never thinking whether it was loaded or not, and ran down there with it, and after that it occurred to me that the pistol was not' loaded. I showed the pis-toi to Bert Taylor, the marshal, when he came to arrest me shortly after-wards.”

Counsel for appellant assign as error the action of the court in giving the following instructions for the State:

“1. Before you would be warranted in convicting the defendant, you must believe from all. the evidence in the case to a moral certainty that -the defendant did in this county and State and within the past twelve months wear and carry as a weapon a pistol.”
“2. You are further instructed that to constitute the wearing of a pistol as a weapon it is not necessary that same be loaded.”

And in refusing the following asked by appellant:

“1. I charge you that if you find that the pistol .in this case was not loaded at the time that it was carried and was therefore not fit to use as a weapon, this rebuts the presumption that it was carried as a weapon, and you will acquit the defendant.”
“2. I charge you that if a man carries a pistol the presumption is that the pistol was loaded and carried -as a weapon, but this presumption may be overcome by proof that the pistol . was not loaded and so unfit for use as a weapon; so in this case 'if you find that the pistol was not in a condition to be used as a weapon, and not carried as a weapon, you will acquit the defendant.”

They urge that, under the first instruction, the jury were authorized to convict if they found the appellant carried a pistol as a weapon subsequent to the filing of the information against him. It is sufficient answer to this objection to say that there was no testimony to show that appellant carried a pistol on a day subsequent to the filing of the information. The testimony was all directed to the day that he ran out of his office into the street and threatened the boys, and this happened before the information was filed. Indeed the undisputed evidence shows that this occurrence was the cause of his being arrested, and no prejudice could have resulted from the language of the instruction. If appellant thought so, he should have made specific objection to it.

There was nó error in giving the second instruction at the request of the State. “The statute does not require that the pistol should be loaded. * * * If it did, its value would be seriously impaired, for that is a fact which can hardly ever be ascertained beyond peradventure until somebody is shot.” State v. Wardlaw, 43 Ark. 73.

The court properly refused to give instructions Nos. 1 and 2 asked by appellant. They in effect told the jury as a matter of law that if the pistol was not loaded it was not carried as a weapon. If-this was the law, a person might carry a pistol with loose cartridges in his pocket and thus escape the penalties of the law.

The case of Carr v. State, 35 Ark. 448, is not authority for the giving of the instructions asked by appellant. Indeed, it is the other way. There the court held that when the State showed that a person wore a pistol concealed the presumption was that it was carried as a weapon, but that this presumption was one of fact, and might be overcome by affirmative proof on the part of the defendant. Proof that the pistol was unloaded may be considered, with the other facts and circumstances in the case, by the jury in determining whether it was carried as a weapon, but the court can not declare as a matter of law that proof that the pistol was not loaded conclusively rebuts the presumption that it was being carried as a weapon.

In the case at bar the pistol was capable of being used as a weapon. The appellant admits that he cleaned it for that very purpose, and, in his anger, he intended to use it as a weapon on the day he is charged with carrying it. It will not do to say that because it was unloaded the court should instruct the jury that it was rendered unfit for use, and that the presumption that it was worn as a weapon was thereby overcome.

No other assignments of error are urged for a reversal of the judgment, and it will be affirmed.

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