72 Ark. 427 | Ark. | 1904
Levi Long was indicted by a grand jury of the Miller circuit court for murder in the first degree, committed by killing E. G. Garrett. The defendant filed a motion to quash the indictment and a demurrer, both of which were overruled. On his motion for change of venue the cause was transferred to the Hempstead circuit court. A transcript of the record and proceedings in the case was filed in that court, but the defendant suggested that it was defective because it did not contain copies of his motion and demurrer, and asked that a writ of certiorari be issued, directing the clerk1 of the Miller circuit court to complete it in that respect, which motion the court denied.
In a trial by jury the testimony of Napoleon H. McDaniel, taken and reduced to writing in an investigation before a justice 'of the peace, was read as evidence, by consent, on the part of the state, which, in part and substantially, is as follows: On the 2d day of January, 1903, witness met the defendant and the deceased at Texarkana, in this state. He saw the deceased and defendant conversing frequently during the day. “Late in the afternoon deceased, defendant and witness took a drink in a saloon, and deceased started out, saying that he had to go.” They went out of the saloon, and walked down Broad street until they reached the 16 to 1 saloon, and stopped there, and deceased and defendant had another conversation, which witness did not hear, and after this defendant invited deceased and witness to take a drink, which they did. The deceased then bade witness and defendant “Good-bye” and left, going east down Broad street, saying that he was going home. Shortly afterwards witness and defendant mounted horses and rode down the same street, going to College Hill. At a particular time, after going some distance, witness, when he was riding a short distance ahead, heard a noise behind, and, looking bade, saw a man approaching on horseback, looking like he had been riding in a gallop, and heard him hollo, “Where in the hell are you fellers going?” and witness replied, “We are going over on the hill.” , The man was the deceased. He rode alongside of the defendant. About this time a pistol was fired. Witness looked back, and saw deceased lying on the pommel of his saddle, and saw a pistol in the hand of the defendant.
The. evidence clearly and conclusively proved that Garrett was killed by the defendant at the time of the shooting related by McDaniel.
The appellant, in testifying in his own behalf, stated that, at the time the deceased overtook them,' McDaniel said to him, “Took,out, he is going to shoot you!” The state, in cross-examining him, asked if he had instructed his attorneys to ask McDaniel, while he was testifying in the investigation before a justice of the peace, if he (McDaniel) made such statement, and the defendant objected, and the court held that the question was proper, but that the defendant could answer or not as he might elect, and he refused to answer.
In cross-examining the defendant, the state interrogated him about his association with McDaniel, which being admitted, asked, for the purpose of impeaching him as a witness, if he had not heard that McDaniel had been convicted of train robbery and murder in Texas and sentenced to the penitentiary for life and pardoned, which, being compelled to answer over his objections, he answered in the affirmative.
On direct examination he testified that one Van Williams, in the evening of the day on which Garrett was killed, informed him that the deceased at that time was angry, and attempted to borrow a pistol, and he thought had succeeded. On cross-examination he was asked if he had process issued for Van Williams, who was absent and did not testify. He offered the testimony of witness to explain Van Williams’ absence, and the court would not allow him to do so.
The defendant offered to prove by witnesses that the deceased had the general reputation in the community in which he lived of going constantly armed, which the court excluded. He was, however, allowed to and did prove that the deceased had the general reputation of being a dangerous man.
One of the attorneys for the state in the closing speech to the jury in the case said: “Napoleon McDaniel (the witness whose testimony in the investigation before a justice of the peace was read as evidence) has not only been convicted of train robbery and murder, but is now confined in the jail of Bowie county, Texas, for murdering a poor old Confederaté soldier.” Defendant objecting to the remark, the court reprimanded the attorney, and told the jury not to consider’it. “Whereupon,” says the record in this case, “said attorney, supported by the prosecuting attorney, stated to the court, in the presence and hearing of the jury, that the record showed this fact. Then on a discussion between the attorneys and the court, in the presence of the jury, it developed that the statement made by said attorney appeared on the sheriff’s return on the subpoena issued for said witness McDaniel, except that relating to ‘poor old Confederate soldier,’ but that said subpoena was not made evidence in the case.” Other improper remarks were made by the same attorney in his speech before the jury, which were excluded by the court from their consideration.
The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and he appealed.
There was no reversible error in the refusal to issue a writ of certiorari to the clerk of the Miller circuit court, directing him to complete the transcript of the record and proceedings of that court, so as to show copies of his motion to quash the indictment and demurrer to the same. The record shows that the indictment is sufficient, and that it was regularly and properly found, returned into court, numbered and filed.
The question asked appellant, on cross-examination, as to his instructing his attorneys to ask McDaniel, when testifying in the investigation before the justice of the peace, if he (McDaniel) said at the time deceased was killed, “Took out, he is going to shoot you,” and the remarks of the court as to the same, were not prejudicial. The testimony of McDaniel, which was read to the jury, shows that he did not testify as to what he said about the deceased shooting at the time of the killing. The only effect of the question was to call the attention of the jury to such failure, which the attorneys for the state could have done in their arguments before the jury.
The court committed no error in allowing the state, in cross-examining the appellant, to ask him “if he had not heard that the witness McDaniel had been convicted of train robbery and murder in Texas and sentenced to the penitentiary for life and pardoned.” The question was admissible for the purpose of impeaching him as a witness. Hollingworth v. State, 53 Ark. 387.
Appellant should have been allowed to show why Van Williams did not testify, was absent. He (appellant) testified as to facts material to his defense which, if true, were within the knortledge of Van Williams. The unexplained failure to introduce him as a witness was calculated to induce the jury to doubt or reject the testimony of appellant as to such facts.
The testimony as to the general reputation of the deceased for going armed was properly excluded. No one is justified in killing another because he has the reputation of going armed, or because he is armed. Such reputation is not allowed to be„proved “as a substantive fact, in whole or in part absolutely constituting a defense, but as auxiliary to, and explanatory of, some fact or facts proved to have occurred at and in connection with the killing, which tend to establish a defense when thereby aided by furnishing reasonable ground for the belief on the part of the slayer that he is then in immediate and imminent danger of the loss of his life, or receiving a great bodily injury, from the attack of his assailant.” Such reputation, when unknown to the slayer, cannot contribute to a belief on his part that he is in imminent danger of losing his life or suffering a great bodily injury. But, it being a matter of public notoriety, it is sometimes presumed, in a'proper case, that the slayer had. knowledge of it. But this is not presumed when the slayer and deceased reside in different and distant communities. Horbach v. State, 43 Texas, 242; Harrison v. Com. 79 Va. 374; s. c. 52 Am. Rep. 634; Trabune v. Com. (Ky.), 17 S. W. Rep. 186; Underhill on Criminal Evidence, § 324, and cases cited; 5 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law (2d Ed.), 873, and notes, and cases cited. In this case there is no presumption of knowledge. Appellant resided in Bowie county, Texas, about fourteen miles west of Texarkana, Arkansas, and the deceased lived southeast of Texarkana, and in Miller county, in this state. There was no foundation laid for such presumption.
The remark of the attorney for the state as to the witness McDaniel being confined in jail for murdering a poor old Confederate soldier was improper and prejudicial. It tended to impair the credibility of the witness McDaniel, and to thereby weaken his testimony as to facts material to the defense of appellant. They came within the rule announced in Holder v. State, 58 Ark. 473, and Kansas City, Fort Scott & Memphis Railroad Company v. Sokal, 61 Ark. 130.
Reverse and remand for a new trial.