45 Fla. 94 | Fla. | 1903
This is the third appearance of this case here. The defendant (plaintiff in error) was indicted on the 15th day of August, 1899, in the Circuit Court of Duval county for the crime of murder, was there tried and convicted of mur-. der in the first degree. On writ of error to this .court suck judgment of conviction was reversed and a new trial awarded. (Roberson v. State, 42 Fla. 223, 28 South. Rep. 424.) After such reversal the defendant was again tried in June, 1900, was again convicted of murder in the first degree, and .such judgment of conviction on writ of error was again reversed here' in March, 1901, and a new trial awarded. (Roberson v. State, 43 Fla. , 29 South. Rep. 535.) In July, 1902, the defendant was again tried and again convicted of murder in the first degree,'and again seeks reversal here by wilt of error.
Section Í523 of our Revised Statutes provides as follows : “All papers, written or printed, of any kind -whatsoever, and tire records and files of any official, court or public office, may be re-established in the manner hereinafter provided.”
Sortion 1527 Revised Statutes provides in part as follows : “Any paper, record or file re-establislied shall have the force and effect of the original.”
The procedure here prescribed was complied with in the re-establishment of the indictment and other proceedings in the cause, and, consequently, the first and second assignments of error predicated thereon must fail. That the indictment and other proceedings thus re-established were exact and accurate copies of the destroyed originals, there can be no question, since the copies submitted for re-establishment appear by the certifícale of the .clerk of this court appended thereto to have been taken frofrv the certified transcript of the record filed here in the case in the former writ of error proceedings. After verdict the defendant moved in arrest of judgment upon the following grounds: “1. Said court did not obtain jurisdiction in said cause to try this defendant at this fluring term,'A. D. 1902, of said court, because, as will appear from an inspection of the record herein, this court granted a writ of error from the judgment of said court
2. Said records and files in said cause show that no mandate other than one in which ‘duplicate’ filed by the clerk of this court June 20, 1902, bearing date April 5, 1901, under the hand of the clerk of the Supreme Court of Florida, and under its seal, has been filed in said court in the said cause.
3. The record herein fails to show as a part thereof the mandate of the Supreme Court of Florida remanding
á. The record shows that the defendant was tried ' upon an alleged copy of the original indictment found against the defendant.
5. The defendant was tried upon a copy of the indictment found against him, under an order reestablishing said indictment under the provisions of lawgin the Revised Statutes of Florida applicable to civil cases only and not to criminal cases.
6. As will appear from said record no notice of application to reestablish said copies opon Avhich defendant was tried, Avas served on the defendant personally.
7. As will appear from said record and from the papers filed June 21, 1902, marked ‘duplicate,’ being in form a mandate of the Supreme Court of Florida, the defendant Avas sentenced on a verdict of murder in the first degree June 30, 1902, that on said date writ of error was ordered by this court to the Supreme Court of Florida from said judgment returnable to the January term, 1901, in said Supreme Court, that said Avrit issued and that the said Supreme .Court reversed the judgment in said cause March 5th, 1901, and remanded said cause to this court for a new trial, and further, after íavo regular terms of this court had elapsed since said judgment of reversal Avas rendered by said Supreme Court and since the mandate remanding said cáse to this court for a neAV trial Avas issued in Avhich any action being taken in said case by this court and no new indictment having
S. Said verdict does not show that it was rendered in this case, nor in what case it was rendered.
9. For further reasons apparent on the face of said, record,, and because no judgment against him, the said Frank Roberson, could be lawfully sentenced on said verdict.”
The technical point is sought to be made in this motion that at the time of the last trial of the defendant the Circuit Court had not re-obtained jurisdiction of said cause after the same was formerly brought to this court by writ of error, because it- did not affirmatively appear at the time of such trial that the last mandate of this court was of file in the Circuit Court. This contention is untenable. The record shows that the mandate of this court was issued and sent to the Circuit Court on April 5th. 1901, and that a duplicate of. such mandate was filed in the Circuit Court on June 21st, 1902. The latter being filed presumably in consequence of the general destruction of the Circuit Court records by the fire of May 3rd, 1901. But even without the presence of the duplicate mandate in the Circuit Court such court had full power to proceed with the trial because it was a fact that the cause had here been remanded for new trial on April 5th, 1901, and the mandate of this court then sent to the Circuit Court, all of which fully appears by the record here in the case, and of its own records this court, of course, takes judicial cognizance.
The next contention of the motion in arrest is that the defendant was tried upon an alleged copy of the indictment re-established by order of the Circuit Court. Under this phase of the motion it is contended here that the
• In the case-at bar the defendant had been formerly arraigned upon the original indictment, and had formerly assailed the lost original by motion to quash, and had formerly plead thereto upon two separate occasions. There was no error under the circumstances of the case, in putting the defendant to his trial upon the substituted copy of the destroyed indictment.
It is again contended that the proceedings for re-estab
The verdict of the jury in the case was as follows: “We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, so say we all. J. E. Pickett, foreman.” It is contended by the motion in arrest of judgment that this verdict is illegal and insufficient because it does not show That it was rendered in this case, nor in what case it was rendered. The defendant was the sole party named in the indictment and was the only party tried; the record expressly named him throughout, and, as was practically held in the case of Williams v. ¡átate, decided at the present term, the record in a cause may he resorted to in aid of the verdict, and when such record makes the verdict certain in every respect it is sufficient.
The defendant requested the court to give the following charges, among others: “3. The legislature of this State passed an act in the year 1901, since the killing of the said Sadler, making the fact of carrying concealed on or about the person an offence; but at the time of the killing mentioned in the indictment, sheriffs, deputy sheriffs and constables could not under the law of thj^ State, lawfully arrest a person without warrant for the bare
“4. If the jury find from the evidence that the deceased Sadler arrested the defendant for carrying, concealed weapons, but at the time of such arrest the said Sadler had no warrant authorizing him to do so, then the said Sadler acted unlawfully, and if you find from the evidence that the prisoner killed him without at the time having expressed malice towards the said Sadler, and fired the fatal shot while resisting such arrest, such killing would not amount to murder in either degree, but would constitute the crime of manslaughter, and the verdict should be that the defandant is guilty of manslaughter.”
“6. The law esteems human liberty when the citizen is in the peace of its commonwealth so highly that any attempt to arrest without authority of law is speaking a great provocation, and if such citizen kills an officer attempting to make an illegal seizure of his person, although such killing will be neither excusable nor justifiable, yet will not amount in law to more than manslaughter.” These charges were refused and are severally assigned as error. The first of these refused instructions, numbered 3 had already been correctly given in substance,
The denial of the defendant’s motion for new trial is also assigned as error. The only ground of thi-s motion not already disposed of is that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. We hare given the evidence most careful consideration, and, Avliile there are serious conflicts therein, yet Ave think that there is sufficient on the part of the prosecution to sustain the A’erdict, particularly in view of the fact that three separate juries ha-ve arrived at the same verdict upon substantially the same facts on the part of the prosecution. The jury by their verdict have settled the conflicts therein on the side of the truth of the charge, and it is not the province of this court to disturb their settlement of it.
Finding no errors in the record, the judgment of the circuit court in said cause is hereby affirmed.