City of Casper v. Wagner

284 P.2d 409, 74 Wyo. 115, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 21
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1955
Docket2667
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 284 P.2d 409 (City of Casper v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Casper v. Wagner, 284 P.2d 409, 74 Wyo. 115, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 21 (Wyo. 1955).

Opinion

OPINION

Riner, Chief Justice.

Leo C. Wagner, subsequently referred to herein as “defendant” or “appellant,” was on March 13, 1952, convicted in the municipal court of the city of Casper, usually designated subsequently as “plaintiff” or “respondent,” of a violation of Section 9-365 of Ordinance No. 1042-A, Revised Code of the said City of Casper, the violation charged being the driving of a motor vehicle upon the streets of said city while under the influence of intoxicating liquor.

The police justice before whom the case was brought found Wagner guilty and ordered him to pay a fine of one hundred dollars. The defendant gave oral notice of appeal which was followed by a written notice to the same effect, and a recognizance was given in the sum of one hundred and ten dollars as fixed by the *117 police justice. These papers together with the transcript of the entries on the police justice’s docket were filed in the District Court of Natrona County on March 20, 1952. Under this recognizance, the defendant was set at liberty and at all times herein has been free and as far as the record shows has not complied with the order of the municipal police justice.

On March 13, 1954, the defendant filed in said district court a motion that an order be granted therein discharging the defendant “so far as relates to the offense herein charged, for the reason defendant has not been brought to trial before the end of the third term of this Court in which this cause is pending . . . ” As a matter of fact, it appears that four terms of the district court had elapsed since the date of the trial in the municipal court. The motion of the defendant in this respect stated also that such delay was “without application of the defendant.”

On April 10, 1954, the plaintiff through its city attorney filed in said district court its motion for the dismissal of said appeal upon the ground that the “defendant . . . has failed to diligently prosecute” this appeal thus taken.

On the date last mentioned, the district court sustained the plaintiff’s motion and dismissed the defendant’s appeal. The defendant then appealed the cause to this court, making complaint of the order of dismissal last mentioned.

The appeal procedure from a decision of a police justice in the first class cities of this State “shall be as prescribed for appeals from courts of justice of the peace in criminal cases.” See Section 29-252, Wyoming Compiled Statutes, 1945. Article 2 of Chapter 15, W.C.S., 1945, supplies the authority for appeals to the district court from justice of the peace courts.

*118 Section 15-207, W.C.S., 1945, provides the cause shall stand for trial anew in the district court with that court exercising' full power over the case, the justice of the peace, his docket entries, and his return.

Section 15-208, W.C.S., 1945, directs that:

“No appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace in a criminal case, shall be dismissed, except in the following cases:
First — Where the supposed offense set out in the information shall not be an offense under law;
Second — When there shall be no sufficient charge of an offense.
And when an appeal shall be dismissed, the defendant cannot be again tried for the same offense. (C. L. 1876, ch. 71, Part II, § 40; R. S. 1887, § 3660; R. S. 1899, § 5261; C. S. 1910; § 6123; C. S. 1920, § 7420; R. S. 1931, § 33-149.)”

The district court in the case at bar had before it for construction neither of these two cases.

The defendant relies upon the provisions of Section 10-1313, W.C.S., 1945. That section reads as follows: “If any person indicted for any offense, who has given bail for his appearence, shall not be brought to trial before the end of the third term of the court in which the cause is pending, held after such indictment is found, he shall be entitled to be discharged, so far as relates to such offense, unless the delay happens on his application, or be occasioned by the want of time to try such cause at such third term. (C. L. 1876, ch. 14, § 151; R. S. 1887, § 3312; R. S. 1899, § 5383; C. S. 1910, § 6247; C. S. 1920, § 7544; R. S. 1931, § 33-914.)”

But this section of the statutes is not available to the defendant in this case. He had already been given a trial in the municipal court. It is not contended that the defendant’s trial was not a speedy one, and it is to be noted that the defendant had been found guilty by the police justice. The defendant never at any time *119 after the cause was pending in the district court requested that court for a trial of the issues disposed of by the judgment of the police justice. He did nothing but wait for the time to elapse so that he could seek to invoke the quoted section above, Section 10-1313, W.C.S., 1945.

In Hottle vs. District Court in and for Clinton County, 233 Iowa 904, 11 N.W. 2d 30, 35, the court said in part:

“In the case of Pines v. District Court, supra,” (233 Iowa 1284, 10 N.W. 2d 574) “we overruled the case of Davidson v. Garfield, 221 Iowa 424, 265 N.W. 645, and re-established our former rule, that is the clear weight of authority ‘* * * that a demand for trial, resistance to postponement, or some other effort to secure a speedy trial must be made by one charged with a crime, by indictment or information, to entitle him to a dismissal of the charge, under either the constitution or statutory provisions involved herein/ The authorities are divided upon whether the constitutional and. statutory guarantees of speedy trial are waived by failing to demand trial when the defendant is serving a sentence for another offense. In Fulton v. State, 178 Ark. 841, 12 S.W. 2d 777, 778, the court stated:
‘* * * as it is stipulated that appellants have not been brought into open court and put upon trial, or given an opportunity to demand a trial we hold that these men, who have had no opportunity to demand a trial, should not be regarded as having waived this valuable right/
“In State v. McTague, 173 Minn. 153, 216 N.W. 787, 788, the court first stated: ‘The suggestion that defendant could not be tried because he was in State Prison is .without substance. The state that holds him in prison is the same state that prosecutes these indictments. His imprisonment could not be used by him as an excuse to avoid trial, much less the state/ But the Minnesota Supreme Court held in this case: ‘The spirit of the law is that the accused must go on record in the attitude of demanding a trial or resisting delay. If he *120 does not do this, he must be held, in law, to have waived the privilege. Until he has so acted, the state is not called upon to establish the existence of the statutory “good cause.” State v. Artz, 154 Minn. 290, 191 N.W. 605; State v. Dinger, 51 N.D. 98, 199 N.W. 196, and cases cited; 44 L.R.A., N.S., 871, note. Upon the record, defendant was not entitled to the relief sought.’
“The rule of the Minnesota Supreme Court is probably the majority rule. In 22 C.J.S., Criminal Law, § 469, p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P.2d 409, 74 Wyo. 115, 1955 Wyo. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-casper-v-wagner-wyo-1955.