54 Ark. 604 | Ark. | 1891
The appellant was convicted of perjury in the .Johnson circuit court, filed a motion in arrest of judgment and a motion for a new trial which were overruled, to which he excepted and appealed.
The indictment charges in substance that, on the trial of Blair Davis in said Johnson circuit court, upon a charge of seduction of Nannie Walton, it was a material question whether the said Z.L. Robertson did, at the May term, 1889, of the circuit court of Johnson county, testify and give evidence before the grand jury that Blair Davis had told him, the said Z. L. Robertson, that he, the said Blair Davis, was engaged to be married to Nannie Walton, and that this conversation occurred in the fall of 1888 ; and that the said Z. L. Robertson (the appellant), having been called as a witness upon the trial aforesaid before the circuit court, falsely, maliciously, knowingly, wilfully, corruptly and feloniously did depose, swear and give evidence to the jurors “ that he, the said Z. L. Robertson, did not testify before the grand jury of the Johnson county circuit court, at its May term, 1889, that Blair Davis told him, the said Z. L. Robertson, that he, Blair Davis, was engaged to be married to Nannie Walton, and that this conversation occurred in the fall of 1888 ; whereas, in truth and in fact, the said Z. L. Robertson did testify before the grand jury aforesaid, at the May term of the circuit court aforesaid, that Blair Davis did tell him, the said Z. L. Robertson, that he, Blair Davis, was engaged to be married to Nannie Walton, and that this conversation occurred in .the fall of 1888.”
This is the gist of the charge.
Instruction numbered five was given by the court and excepted to by the appellant, and is as follows : “ If the jury believe that the defendant deposed before the grand jury as testified to by the foreman and clerk of said grand jury, and that the defendant, with full understanding and conception of his evidence, there signed the minutes of his evidence before said grand jury, which minutes have been here read to the jury in behalf of the State, and that the ..same was material to the finding of the indictment by the grand jury against Davis, you should find the defendant! ■guilty.”
It cannot be supposed that by this instruction the circuit' -court meant to convey to the jury the impression that the -appellant was on trial for perjury committed in swearing falsely before the grand jury, for he had told them in the •first instruction that it was not charged that the appellant • committed perjury when before the grand jury. The instruction seems to be incomplete, and its meaning is not certain. We think it was calculated to confuse, if not mislead, the jury, and that it is erroneous, and ought not to have been given.
The second ground in the motion for a new trial is that the verdict of the jury is not supported by the evidence.
We have searched the bill of exceptions in vain to find any evidence that the appellant testified on the trial of Blair Davis for the seduction of Nannie Walton, in the Johnson county circuit court, that the said Blair Davis did not tell him, the appellant, that he, Blair Davis, was engaged to be married to the said Nannie Walton, and that the statement was made by the said Blair Davis to him, the said Z. L. Robertson (the appellant), in the fall of 1888. There is a total failure of evidence to support the charge.
Coleman Cox and T. W. Rodgers, members of the petit jury that tried the case of the State of Arkansas against Blair Davis for seduction of Nannie Walton, testified in the case at bar on the part of the State, and their evidence is, that the appellant was a witness in the case against Blair Davis, and swore that his testimony before the grand jury was written down, but was not read over to him, and that he did not testify before said grand jury that Blair Davis told him that he was engaged to Nannie Walton, etc. This is as strong ■as any evidence in the case, and it will be seen that it relates alone to what the defendant said he swore before the grand jury, and fails utterly to show that the appellant swore on the trial of Blair Davis that Davis did not tell him that he, Davis, was engaged to Nannie Walton,, etc.
For the errors indicated the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.