after stating the case, delivered tlie opinion of the court.
1. For the reasons stated in the opinion of the court in Gibson v. Mississippi, ante, 565, just decided, it must be adjudged that the petition оf the accused for the removal of the prosecution into the Circuit Court of the United States was properly denied. Neither the constitution nor the laws of Mississippi, by their language reasonably interpreted, оr as interpreted by- the highest court of the State, show that the accused was denied or could not enfоrce in the judicial tribunals of the State, or in the part of the State where such suit or prosecution is pending, “ any right secured to him by any law providing for the equal civil rights of citizens of the United States, or of all persons within thе United States.” Rev. Stat. § 641.
2. No evidence was offered in support of the motion by the accused to quash thе indictment, unless the facts set out in the written motion to quash, verified “to the best of his knowledge and belief,” can be regarded as evidence in support of the motion. We are of opinion that it could not proрerly be so regarded. The case differs from
Neal
v.
Delaware,
3. It is assigned for error that the trial court refused to postpone the trial, to quash thе weekly venire of jurors and the panel of jurors, or to sustain the exception of the accused to the qualifications of jurors tendered to him. Hone of these motions are so presented by the record as to raise any question as to the deprivation of rights secured to the accused by the Constitution or lаws of the United States.
4. The overruling of the motion for a new trial is not a *602 matter which this court can reexamine upon writ of error — the granting or refusing of such a motion being a matter within the discretion of the trial court.
5. In view of the order of the trial court directing the motiоn for a new trial and a motion to arrest the judgment to be embraced in one motion, we have, in our consideration of the case, treated the motion for new trial as having been intended to be also one to arrest the judgment. We are of opinion, for the reasons stated in Gibson v. Mississippi, as well as in this opinion, that no errоr of law was committed by the trial court in declining to arrest the judgment. As the application to remove thе cause into the Circuit Court of the United States was properly overruled, and as the motion to quash the indictment was, for the reasons above stated, also properly overruled, the order refusing to arrest thе judgment cannot be held to be erroneous upon any ground of which this court can take cognizance in its review of the proceedings of the Supreme Court of Mississippi.
It results that the judgment must be
Affirmed.
