Court Opinion

ID: 5142782
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-01 17:20:26.158294+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:37.881381
License: Public Domain

Gill, C. J.
The first assignment of error is that the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to change the venue of this case from the Southern District of the Indian Territory, at Paul’s Valley, to the United States court at Paris, Texas, as is provided for in whatds known as the “Atoka Agreement.” The act of Congress providing for the change of venue herein attempted to be prayed is as follows: “That whenever a member *583of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations is indicted for homicide, he may, within thirty days after such indictment and his arrest thereon, and before the same is reached for trial, file with the clerk of the court in which he is indicted, his affidavit that he cannot get a fair trial in said court, and it thereupon shall be the duty of the judge of said court to order a change of venue in such case to the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, at Fort Smith, Arkansas, or to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, at Paris, Texas, always selecting the court that in his judgment is nearest or most convenient to the place where the crime charged in the indictment is supposed to have been committed, which court shall have jurisdiction to try the case.” Act June 28, 1898, c. 517, § 29, 30 Stat. 511. It will be noticed that the act says: “Whenever a member of the Choctaw or Chickasaw Nations is indicted for homicide, * * * he may file with the clerk of court * * * his affidavit that he cannot get a fair trial in said court, and it thereupon shall be the duty of said court to order a change of venue,” etc. In the 'case at bar the defendant filed his affidavit that he was a member of the Chickasaw Tribe of Indians, and in the same affidavit stated that he could not get a fair trial. In other words, he tendered the issue of his citizenship by his affidavit, but without any other proof of his citizenship to the court, nor, so far as the record discloses, did he make any offer of proof of citizenship, but subjected himself and his affidavit to the court that the court might pass upon whether he was or was not a citizen; and the court, upon an inspection, passed upon the question, and decided that on such showing he was not a Chickasaw citizen, and not entitled to the provisions of the statute. It certainly was within the province of the court to pass upon this question. If the defendant was not a Chickasaw citizen as claimed, he was not entitled to the benefit of the statute. The court was there for the purpose of saying whether, under his showing, he was or was not a Chicka*584saw citizen, and the court held, upon the showing, that he was not a Chickasaw citizen, and therefore not entitled to the benefits of the statute. We do not think there was error in the holding of the court in reference to the matter. If the defendant had come into the court with proof as to his citizenship and tendered it to the court, there might have been something for this court to pass upon to say whether the defendant made such showing of citizenship as entitled him to the benefits of this statute. But he neither prade or tendered any proof whatever on the subject, and the court, upon consideration of what was before him, had the right to pass upon the citizenship question with such means as it had at hand, and its action in holding that •the defendant was not entitled to the provisions of this statute is not error to be reversed by this court upon the record submitted to us.
The appellant, in the presentation of the second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth assignments, groups them together for 'consideration, and complains that the court admitted evidence or excluded same in such manner and in such particulars as were extremely hurtful and prejudicial to the appellant. We have carefully gone over the testimony of the several witnesses, and the action of the court thereon, and the errors complained of in these several assignments of error. We do not think that any error was committed in the admission by the trial judge of the testimony complained of. Had the trial court permitted the testimony offered in the attempt made by the government to prove statements of appellant's codefendant, Lyman Mahardy, after the murder, while in jail, even though the same were made in the hearing of appellant, there would certainly have been prejudicial error; but the court not only excluded such testimony, and took the same from the jury, but stated, in the presence of the jury, that the jury must not consider such statements, and emphasized it by saying that *585“ the statements made by the defendantin custody, with a howling mob around him, should not be taken as evidence against him.” There certainly was no error whatever in such action of the court of which the appellant could complain.
As to the eleventh assignment, complaint is made of that portion of the judge’s instruction relating to the conspiracy, and concluding as follows: “And although you may believe that said Myers had threatened to arrest defendant and parties with him, and had exhibited his pistol for that purpose, and although you ma}'- further believe that said Myers, as an officer, had no right to arrest said parties outside of the corporate limits of Davis, still, if you believe, beyond a reasonable doubt-, 'from the evidence, that said killing was done in compliance with and in furtherance of an unlawful conspiracy,'-such .killing would be murder.”1 We do not think there' was error in' this .charge of the trial judge. If a conspiracy existed to kill the deceased,- and appellant was one of the members of the'Conspiracy — facts which were left wholly to the jury under this and other instructions of the court — and in pursuance of such conspiracy, and as a result of it, the deceased was killed, the act of such killing was. murder and was chargeable to each and every person who entered into such conspiracy. The court does not, in its charge, seek to ascertain whether or not there was a conspiracy, but states, if, under the evidence, there was, and the jury so finds, and the defendant was a party to such conspiracy, and deceased met his death as a result of it, and appellant was one of the conspirators, then appellant would be guilty of murder. There can be no doubt but that this proposition is the law, and there is certainly no error in stating such law to the jury as charged by the court in this case.
The appellant insists, under his eleventh assignment of error, that the evidence in the record called for an affirmative charge on the law of self-defense, and that he called the attention *586of the court to the matter, and submitted three special instructions relative to the law of self-defense. The evidence in this case discloses at no point from beginning to end any claim of self-defense, or any defense in any way whatever. The defense in this case is simply that of requiring the government to fully and satisfactorily make out its case by its evidence. While there was some testimony offered by the defendant, he did not in any way raise the theory of self-defense, nor did it in any wise relate to the act of killing, nor did the defendant testify upon the subject of the killing or the circumstances surrounding the killing at all, and there is no self-defense or any defense shown in the case in an affirmative way. The charges of the court to the jury were to the effect that, if there was a conspiracy to kill the deceased, and the deceased was induced to go to the place of the killing by the act of the conspirators, and if the evidence showed that appellant was one of the conspirators, such killing by the appellant or his co-conspirators was murder; and the jury were told that, if they found that there was a conspiracy, and that defendant was one of the conspirators, and that the deceased was enticed to the place of his death in pursuance of such conspiracy, and then and there done to death by the conspirators, or some one of them, the appellant being one of them, the appellant should be found guilty of murder. The question of the conspiracy, by the instructions of the court, and whether or not the appellant was one of such conspirators, were left wholly to the jury by the court in able, clear, and concise instructions; and the court was not bound in any way, under the evidence, to give instructions based upon the theory of self-defense, when there was no evidence in the case upon which to sustain such theory.
We think that the eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth assignments of error are not well taken; that the evidence in the case was fairly submitted to the jury, and sus*587tains the verdict of guilty against the defendant; and, finding no error whatever in the record, the decision of the lower court is affirmed.
Clayton and Raymond, JJ., concur.