72 Fla. 45 | Fla. | 1916
—The plaintiff in error, hereafter referred to as the defendant, was indicted by the grand jury of Hernando county for the murder of Robert Whitfield in May, 1915, and was brought to trial in the Circuit Court of that county in November, following, when he was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to imprisonment in the State prison at hard labor for a period of ten years. To that judgment the defendant took a writ of error.
The defendant interposed two pleas in abatement to the indictment which in substance aver: First, that the County Commissioners in January, 1915, prepared a list of three hundred and eight persons to serve as jurors during the year 1915, that the list contained the names of W. E. Dees, J. M. Smith and Joe McKinney, but in the record of the list those names were omitted. That in such
Second. On information and belief it is averred that the Circuit Judge did not at the Spring term of the court draw a list of persons to serve as jurors at the Fall term of the court, from the jury box, but the Clerk attempted to do so, and there was not posted at three public places in the county ten days previous a notice of the time and place of drawing the jury as required by law. The pleas were verified by the oath of the defendant. The State Attorney demurred and the court sustained the demurrer by an order in the following language: “The above motion was argued and upon consideration thereof it is ordered that the said motion be denied.” This ruling of the court constitutes the basis of the first assignment of error.
It appears from the averments of the first plea, that the defendant’s objection to the indictment rests upon the failure of the Clerk to correctly record the list of persons qualified to serve as jurors as selected and prepared by the County Commissioners. From anything appearing to the contrary in that plea the names of the persons who served as grand jurors at the Fall term were drawn from the jury box in conformity with the statutory requirements.
Pleas in abatement are required to possess the highest degree of certainty in their averments and of course all intendments are taken against the pleader. Cannon v. State, 62 Fla. 20, 57 South. Rep. 240; Young v. State, 63 Fla.
The second plea is also bad because it does not aver that the names of the persons constituting the grand jury which returned the indictment were drawn from the jury box by the Clerk of the Court in the manner stated in the plea and without the notice required by law, but it avers merely an attempt on the clerk’s part to “Draw from the box the jury” for that term of the court. The attempt of the clerk may have resulted in no selection of the jury by that method, so far as anything in the plea contained shows to the contrary. It is not clearly alleged that the indictment was found by a grand jury whose names were
During the trial a witness for the State, a son of the deceased, was permitted over the defendant’s objection to testify to certain physical infirmities of the deceased from which he suffered about a year before he was killed. The witness spoke at some length about an ailment of some kind from which his father suffered in his right leg, also of an arm drawn and weakened from an accident which happened years before. There was no effort whatever to show that the defendant knew of these infirmities, nor did the testimony subsequently admitted show that the defendant knew of them. The purpose of this testimony was to show that there was not in fact such disparity between the deceased and the defendant in physical strength and vigor as to induce the defendant to believe that he was in greater peril in consequence of the
Assignments of error numbered from three to twenty-one inclusive are based upon the rulings of the court in receiving and rejecting evidence. Many of the assignments are abandoned and some of them rest upon invalid objections of the same character as those discussed under the second assignment. We will not consider these assignments of error in the order in which they were made and argued by counsel, but will discuss such of them as we think are well taken.
A witness, Frank Cotton by name, was called by the
M. S. Slaughter, a witness for the State, testified that he was the coroner who conducted the inquest held upon the body of the deceased. Upon a request from the State Attorney to tell the jury how the witness found the body
The point was well taken and should have been sustained. The coroner’s jury was empanelled the morning following the death of the deceased. H. E. Revels, the sheriff, and A. H. Touchstone, a witness for the State, both arrived upon the scene of the homicide within a half hour after it occurred, they each said that they found no knife on the ground. W. C. Douglas, a witness for the State, who arrived at the scene a few minutes after the homicide also said he looked for a knife and. found none, but the next morning about daylight he found a knife lying upon the ground a few feet from the body, and gave the knife to Mr. Cassman who kept it. The defense was that the deceased was advancing upon the defendant with an open knife endeavoring to cut him when the defendant fired the fatal shots. The coroner’s instructions to the jury, which was empanelled about ten o’clock Monday morning, to look for a knife was immaterial and irrelevant testimony. Yet it could not be said to have been without prejudice to the defendant. The importance which the coroner attached to the circumstance and his desire to obtain that evidence, could have had no other effect than to impress the jury with the coroner’s view of its value as a circumstance in defendant’s
The other assignments of error which are argued and based upon objections to the reception and rejection of evidence we have examined, but find no error in the ruling of the court.
During the argument of the State Attorney before the jury the defendant without the knowledge or consent of the court left the court room and went across the hall into another room. The State Attorney who was seemingly not aware of the defendant’s absence proceeded with his argument. This circumstance was made the sixth ground of the motion for a new trial, which motion was overruled. In view of the conclusion at which we have arrived upon the assignments of error above discussed, and the unlikelihood of this proceeding being repeated upon another trial of. the cause, we will not decide the point presented. We deem it advisable however to say that such an irregularity should under no circumstances be permitted. The legality of a conviction under such
We have discovered no errors in the record further than have been pointed out above, for which errors the judgment is reversed.
Taylor, C. J. and Shackleford, Cockrell and Whitfield, JJ. concur.