Stokes v. State

122 Ark. 56 | Ark. | 1916

Hart, J.

The deputy prosecuting attorney of Washington County, Arkansas, filed an information before a justice of the peace of said county, charging the defendant, Harry G. Stokes, with the statutory crime of abandoning his wife and child. See Acts 1909, page 134.

The defendant entered a plea of guilty, and his punishment was fixed by the justice of the peace at a fine of $75 and imprisonment for sixty days in the county jail.

Within the time allowed by statute he prayed and was granted an appeal to the circuit court of Washington County. When his- case came -on for trial in the circuit’ court he was permitted to withdraw his plea of guilty and to enter a plea of not guilty. He was tried and convicted in the circuit court and the jury fixed his punishment at a fine of ¡$350 and one years’ imprisonment in the county jail.

From the judgment of’conviction the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

The circuit court should have dismissed the appeal of the defendant. The defendant entered his plea of guilty before the justice , of the peace. In doing so he confessed himself guilty in the manner and form as charged against him in the information.

Where the facts alleged in ani information or indictment do not constitute an offense, the defendant has lost nothing by pleading guilty, and on appeal may attack the indictment or information for the first time. Fletcher v. State, 12 Ark. 169.

In the instant case we have not set out the information. It was filed under Act 52 of the Acts of 1909 and charged the defendant with the crime of wife abandonment. It was substantially in the language of the act and no objection has been made or could be made as to its form.

The defendant pleaded guilty when he was arraigned before the justice of the peace and sentence was there pronounced against him. His plea of guilty as received by the court and recorded was an admission of any offense well charged in the information. Unless it was withdrawn by leave of the court there would be nothing left to be done but for the court to pass sentence upon him. The reason is that a plea of guilty is a formal confession of guilt before the court in which the defendant is arraigned, .and the court .can then only pass sentence as upon a verdict. State v. Wright, 96 Ark. 203; Clark’s Criminal Procedure, pp. 373, 374.

In the case of Commonwealth v. Mahoney, 115 Mass. 151, the court held that a plaintiff who pleads guilty to a complaint in the municipal court and appeals to the superior court is not entitled to a trial by jury and that unless the plea is withdrawn by special leave of the court in which it is made, or a motion is interposed in arrest of judgment for legal defects apparent on the record, t'he commonwealth is entitled to have sentence passed. See, also, Commonwealth v. Winton, 108 Mass. 485, and 12 Cyc. 801.

It follows that the circuit court erred in not dismissing the appeal of the defendant and for that error the judgment will he reversed ¡and the appeal of the defendant from the justice of the peace court to the circuit court will he dismissed.

It is so ordered.