Darden v. State

Hill, C. J.

This is the second appearance of this case in this court. The case is first reported in 73 Ark. 315 (Darden v. State), where a conviction for murder in the second degree was reversed and judgment modified to sustain a conviction for manslaughter only, and the cause remanded to the circuit court for the circuit judge to fix the punishment for manslaughter and impose the sentence therefor. The appellant filed a motion for a rehearing, in which he set forth, among other matters, that it was an infringement of his constitutional rights to be sentenced for manslaughter without another trial upon the indictment, claiming that 'his rights under both the State and Federal constitutions weré violated by the action of the court. That motion was overruled, and the original judgment directed to be carried into execution.

From this judgment a writ of error was prosecuted to the Supreme Court of the United States. The State moved in that court to dismiss the writ on the ground that the judgment of this court was not final, and said motion was sustained, and the writ dismissed. Darden v. Arkansas, 200 U. S. 615.

After the dismissal of said writ of error, the Prairie Circuit Court, in obedience to the mandate of this court, again assumed jurisdiction of the case.

The appellant there renewed the grounds of objection to the proceeding which he had presented upon the motion for a rehearing in this court. Pie alleged that he was not guilty of manslaughter, or any other crime, and demanded a trial by jury, and especially demanded that a jury be impaneled to determine the amount of punishment for the crime of manslaughter if the court held that he must be sentenced for that offence. He interposed in his behalf various sections of the Constitution of Arkansas, which he alleged were being violated by the proceedings against him, and also alleged that a sentence upon him without a jury having been first impaneled, sworn and charged to assess his punishment would be depriving him of his liberty without due process of law, in violation of the laws and Constitution of Arkansas and of the United States, and he demanded a new trial before a jury of his peers, and alleged that a sentence without such trial would be a violation of the Constitution of Arkansas and of the United States.

All these pleas were overruled, and the circuit court fixed his punishment at four years in the penitentiary, and sentenced him accordingly. The appellant then prayed an appeal to this court, which the circuit court refused to grant him.

The statutes provide that upon any conviction, other than for a capital offense, the circuit court may grant the defendant an appeal to the Supreme Court. In the event that the circuit court refuses to grant the appeal, then the appellant may lodge his transcript in the Supreme Court and apply to one of its judges for an appeal. The judge shall, after an examination of the transcript, allow the appeal unless he is satisfied that there are no reasonable grounds to believe that any errors prejudicial to the defendant have been committed, and that thé appeal is prayed for delay only, in which event he shall refuse the appeal and so indorse, it upon the transcript. See Kirby’s Digest, § § 2588,' 2596, 2600.

The appellant pursued the statute in this case, and laid the transcript before one of the judges of this court, who, after examining the same, granted the appeal. The State now moves to dismiss that appeal.

The question whether an appeal should lie was addressed, in the first instance, to the circuit judge, and in the second instance to the judge of this court to whom the application was made; after either of those judges grants the appeal, then the appeal is a fact accomplished; it is a closed incident, and is not subject to dismissal in cases where an appeal lies; and this is an appeal-able judgment.

Various cases are cited which arose under different practice acts, but none has been found which will deny the right to hear an appeal after it has been granted by one authorized by law to grant it and the order appealed from is an appealable one. It is true that the appeal in this case presents a very narrow subject of review; but, be it broad or narrow, it is here for decision. The sole question is whether the circuit judge obeyed the mandate of this court. All other questions were precluded by the former decision.

The question now is, not whether the appeal should have been granted — for that has been done — but whether the judgment should be affirmed or reversed.

The court complied with the mandate properly, and there were no questions raised below which were not raised and considered on the former hearing of this case. The action of this court in reversing the conviction for'murder in the second degree and directing a sentence for manslaughter — in other words, modifying the conviction so as to make it manslaughter, instead of murder in the second degree, and delegating the duty of fixing the punishment and imposing the sentence to the circuit judge, instead of exercising it here, is not a violation of any rights guarantied to the appellant by the Constitution or statutes of Arkansas. As pointed out in one of the former opinions in this case,- the practice in this regard was established in an opinion delivered by Chief Justice Cockrirr in Simpson v. State, 56 Ark. 19, and has been followed in many cases since.

The proceeding is not in violation of any of the provisions of the Federal Constitution or the amendments thereto. The case of Maxwell v. Dow, 176 U. S. 581, has put at rest any possible question in this regard. That case reviews many previous decisions of that tribunal, holding that the constitutional privileges of presentment'by a grand jury and trial by jury are not rights guarantied by the Constitution or any of its amendments to pro.ceedings in State Courts; that such privileges are not ones which the Federal Constitution, or any of its amendments, prevent a State from taking away from its citizens or citizens of other States within its borders. It is expressly held that the Fourteenth Amendment does not prohibit a State from abolishing trial by jury, as understood at common law.

Hence it follows that the asserted deprivation of rights secured by the Federal Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment thereto are groundless because the Federal ¡Constitution and Fourteenth Amendment do not guaranty a jury trial in any form to a person charged with crime as one of the rights the States are required to give. Therefore, if the contention was true that the rule in the Simpson case which is applied here denied a right of trial by jury, there would be no violation of the Federal Constitution 'or the Fourteenth Amendment thereto or any other amendment, but only a violation of the State Constitution, and this court has often held that such is not the case.

Judgment affirmed.