50 Ark. 534 | Ark. | 1888
The defendant, Hudspeth, was twice indicted in the Marion circuit court for murder in the first degree, committed by killing one George Watkins — was twice indicted for the same offense, The indictments were found by different grand juries and at different terms of the court. The second was found at the August term in 1887. The defendant moved to set it aside for the following reasons:
First, The grand jury which found it had not been selected, summoned and impanelled in the manner prescribed by law.
Second. The grand jury which returned it had not been selected and summoned by the sheriff; and that no list of the jurors composing said grand-jury was on file in the office of the circuit court, showing that they were selected by jury commissioners appointed by the court, and that there was no record showing an order of the court appointing jury commissioners to select persons to serve as grand jurors at-the term of the court at which the second indictment was found. '
Third. Because there was an indictment against him for the same offense, which had not been set aside, and this cause was submitted to the grand jury for its action while it was pending,
Fourth. Because he was held to answer the charge preferred against him, and was confined in jail, at the time the grand jury, which found the second indictment, was impan-elled ; that William T. Dobbs, a member thereof, had been summoned to testify against him as to the offense for which he was indicted ; and that, by reason of his imprisonment, he was deprived of his right to object to his competency to serve as a member of such jury.
To sustain.this motion, the defendant introduced the clerk of the court, who testified that, at the February term of the Marion circuit court in the year 1887, jury commissioners were appointed by the court; that they selected the grand jurors and alternates to serve at the August term of the court in the same year, and made out a list of them, and sealed them up in an envelope, and filed it in open court; that on the 25th of July, 1887, he opened the envelope containing the lists, and made out copies thereof and delivered them to the sheriff; that on the 10th of August following the records of Marion county, including the- first indictment and the lists made out by the jury commissioners, were destroyed-by fire; that enough of the records of the proceedings of the • Marion circuit court remain to show that an order was made appointing said jury commissioners and that they had acted ; that he examined the copies he made carefully, and that he believed the lists returned into court to be exact copies- of the originals. From this we infer that the sheriff returned the copies delivered to him, served, after the originals were burnt, and that from these copies the grand jury for the August term were selected. .
The fourth reason assigned in the motion was admitted by the state to be true. But it appears that the fact that the first indictment and record thereof were burnt was unknown to the court at the time the grand jury was impanelled. After it was discovered the defendant was brought into court, and appeared by his attorney, and the court ordered that the charge against him be submitted to the grand jury then im-panelled for their action. It does not appear that he demanded that the grand jury be brought into court in order that he might object to the competency of any member thereof to investigate and act upon the charge against him, but simply excepted to the order of submission. No objection was made to any member until after the second indictment was found and filed in court.
The court refused to sustain the motion, and the defendant was tried on the second indictment, convicted of murder in the first degree and condemned to death.
It is now contended that the motion should have been sustained, because the grand jury which returned the in'dict-méüt into court was illegally impanelled. It is contended-that, the original lists of grand jurors arid alternates selected by the. jury commissioners having been destroyed by fire, it was unlawful to select the members of the grand jury from, copies of such lists. Is this true?
There was no error in the refusal of the court to grant the motion.
The conviction of appellant depended1 almost entirely upon the testimony of Rebecca Watkins. If it be truey she was an accomplice; and he could not be lawfully convicted upon it unless it was corroborated. His life was endangered by it. He was entitled to the benefit of all reasonable doubts as to his guilt or innocence. If witnesses, knowing her general reputation for truth and! morality to be bad, had, on account of that reputation, testified that they would not believe her on oath, the jury might have entertained a reasonable doubt as to his guilt, and acquitted him. Yet'the court refused to allow her to be impeached in the manner indicated.
• The judgment of the court below is, therefore, reversed for the error designated, and this cause is remanded for a new trial.