In the case of Ransom v. State, 49 Ark., 176, it was ruled that a plea of not guilty waived arraignment, where that form had been omitted. Following up that lead it was held in Moore v. State, 51 Ark., 130, that the formal entry of the plea of not guilty, as well as arraignment, was waived by a defendant who voluntarily went to trial as upon a plea of not guilty. That is to say, we treated as done what the court and parties at the trial had regarded as done. But that case was a misdemeanor, and it is argued that it should not rule in this which is a conviction for felony. The reasons which obtained in the former case apply as well in this. The record shows that the appellant was represented by competent counsel, that he voluntarily announced himself ready for trial, and that the cause was treated as at issue upon the plea of not guilty. The defendant was accorded every right that he could have availed himself of under the most formal record entry of hii plea. The only object of the plea was to make an issue. But the whole record attests that an issue was made. To disregard the trial then, and say there was nothing to try because without a plea there was no issue, and without an issue there could be no trial, would be to sacrifice the truth for a system of casuistry which was originally resorted to by the courts only to avoid the bloody consequences of the enforcement of the criminal code of a prior century. The necessity for such niceties of reasoning has passed away.
The statute, moreover, prescribes that a judgment of conviction for a felony shall be reversed only for an error to the defendant’s prejudice appearing upon the record. Mansf. Dig., sec. 2454. See too Cline v. State, 51 Ark., 145. The defendant has made no suggestion of any prejudice resulting from the failure to make a record entry of his plea, none appears upon the record, and we are unable to conceive that any exists. Knowing, doubtless, of the formal defect in the record, he has taken the chance of an acquittal which would have barred further prosecution. The conviction will have the same effect.
The' industry of the attorney general and of the prosecuting attorney who appears with him in the cause has furnished several cases from other courts in point on the question at issue, in line with Moore v. State, 51 Ark., supra. The rule announced in that case is applicable in this. No other question is raised in the case. Let the judgment be affirmed.