Laur v. State

Hart, J.

J. W. Allen made affidavit before H. D. Sebree, mayor of the town of Alrnyra, in Arkansas County, that C. T. Laur had committed a breach of the peace within the corporate limits of said town by cursing him and threatening to fight. Laur was duly arrested and brought before the mayor for trial. He made a motion that Allen be required to give a .bond for costs, which was overruled by the mayor. Laur was tried and convicted. He appealed to the circuit court, where he renewed his motion for a bond for costs. His motion was sustained, and Allen filed a cost bond. Laur was tried and found guilty before a jury, his punishment being assessed at a fine of $25. From the judgment rendered upon the verdict he has appealed to thi$ court.

Counsel for appellant assigns as error the action of the court in regard to the cost bond. Appellant renewed his motion in the circuit court to require the prosecuting witness to give a bond for costs. His motion was sustained, and the bond was filed. The ruling of the circuit judge was right because there was a trial de novo in the circuit court, and the case should not have been dismissed for any mistake of law or irregularity committed in the mayor’s court. This is in accord with the practice suggested in Mann v. State, 37 Ark. 407.

Again, counsel for appellant objects that the ordinance under which Eaur was tried in the mayor’s court was invalid. As we have already seen, the trial in the circuit court was a trial de novo, and, the crime for which he was arrested being a violation of the criminal laws of the State, appellant was properly tried and convicted thereunder. This has been expressly decided in the following cases: Barnett v. Malvern, 62 Ark. 483; Walker v. Fayetteville, 63 Ark. 443; McCall v. Helena, 86 Ark. 442; Searcy v. Turner, 88 Ark. 210, and Marianna v. Vincent, 68 Ark. 247.

Counsel for appellant also insists that there was not sufficient evidence to support the verdict. It is sufficient answer to this to say that J. W. Allen testified that Eaur approached him in front of his place of business in the town of Almyra and began to curse and abuse him and made demonstrations as if to strike him. This testimony was not even contradicted, and is sufficient to sustain the verdict.

The judgment will therefore be affirmed.