Collins v. State

13 Fla. 651
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 13 Fla. 651 (Collins v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. State, 13 Fla. 651 (Fla. 1869).

Opinion

WESTCOTT, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Hone of the evidence in this case is before the court. There is a large mass of testimony and other matter accompanying the record, which cannot be considered for the reason that it is not embraced in a bill of exceptions, properly attested by the judge of the Circuit Court.

The charge of the court, however, was properly excepted to, and the charge, as well as the exception, is certified by the judge in such manner as requires notice. Were it necessary for the court in this case to have the facts or any portion of them before it, to determine the point of law raised by the exception to the charge, we could not examine the question; but it is unnecessary that any of the facts should appear, as one of the instructions given could not have been proper under any state of facts, being plainly in conflict with the statutes of this State.

The judge charged the jury that “the place, the date, the value of the property, and the fact that a bale of cotton was stolen from the Florida Railroad Company, have been established fully.” Sec. 8 of an act to provide writs of error in criminal cases, approved January 4, 1848, provides, “that charges made by judges to juries in all criminal cases shall be reduced to writing, and filed in the case, and shall be exclusively on points of law; and that any violation of this section shall be deemed and construed to be error, from which a writ of error may be prayed as of right.”

The judge in this case charged the jury that certain facts were “ fully established.” These facts were in issue, and it was the exclusive province of the jury to determine whether they were “ fully established ” by the testimony. This was error, and the court should have granted the new trial moved for by the defendant. 3 Fla., 33.

[654]*654The plaintiff in error being clearly entitled to a new trial upon this ground, it is unnecessary to consider the other •errors assigned, which, if found to be well taken, would only entitle him to like relief.

■ There are other matters arising in this case, and which •are. .brought to our attention in a proper manner, which ¡should receive notice, as they arise anterior to the trial, and ¡unless disposed of now, may occasion embarrassment.

It is made to appear that the plaintiff in error, before ■pleading to the indictment in the court below, offered to show by the testimony of the clerk that no record entry upon the minutes, as to the action of the grand jury in open court in reference to this indictment, was made by the clerk until several days after the discharge of the grand jury; that the court refused to hear evidence upon this subject, and that the defendant excepted to this ruling.

There is nothing erroneous in this action of the court. If it should be admitted that the fact that the grand jury make the presentment in open court should properly be entered by the clerk upon the minutes at the time the grand jury, in open court by their act, consummate and complete the accusation, it is not perceived how it is error, if being omitted at the time, the court directs it to be done afterwards during the term.

The court does not, by this act, add to or take from the acts of the grand jury—it does not thereby create or alter a finding or amend an indictment; it simply makes an entry upon the minutes of the court of a known fact in reference to the business and proceedings of the court, in the same manner as it would the'entry of a verdict of the jury, by chance omitted in any particular case, or a judgment of the court upon a demurrer to pleas.

. This question was considered in the case of the Commonwealth vs. Cawood, 2 Va. Cases, 527, where it was insisted by the State that the recording of the action of the grand jury in open court, in the matter of a presentment by indict[655]*655ment, was a simple ministerial act of the clerk, and its omission could be supplied by an entry made after the term, in which the accusation was preferred. The court say, “ a view of the decisions in this country and in England leads us to the conclusion, that during the term the records are in the breast of the court, and that amendments may be made in the proceedings of the court; but after the term has passed, no amendments can be made except inej’e clerical misprisions.”

In 28 Ala., 11, the court directed the clerk, after verdict m a capital case, to make the entry upon the minutes, showing that the indictment had been presented by the grand jury in open court. Upon exception to this action of the court, and a writ of error from the Supreme Court, the Supreme Court affirm the judgment and remark that “where the trial and conviction occur at the term at which the indictment was found, the court may, at any time during that term, as well after as before the conviction, cause its clerk to endorse on the indictment filed? and to date such endorsement according to the fact, and to sign it; and may also cause an entry to be made on the minutes that the indictment was returned into court by the grand jury, and the day on which it was so returned into court. Over-such matters the court has control during the term, and may alter, amend, or set them aside as justice may require.”

The principle is amply illustrated by numerous cases in England and the United States. 1 Saunders, 250; 6 East, 328; 1 M. & S., 442; 1 Salk., 47; 2 Burr., 1,099; Chitty’s Crim. Law, 752; 9 Fla., 541; 3 Iowa, 252; 16 Ala., 421; 2 Cush., 115-23-7; 7 Md., 442 ; 2 Va. Cases, 89, 111; 7 Eng., 62; 4 Cal., 238 ; 13 Mass., 455; 28 Ga., 236; 8 Mich., 70; 17 Texas, 237; Bish. Crim. Proc., 906-7. What was done in this case was done during the term, and the power of the court to this extent cannot be questioned, even as to judicial acts as distinct from ministerial. In England, whei’e the indictment is sometimes removed to the Court of Queen’s [656]*656Pencil, although found in an inferior court, this matter was contained in the caption of the indictment, which sets forth the judicial history of the cause to the time of finding the indictment. See the doctrine of amendments of the caption in England discussed in 1 Saunders, 249-50; 1 Chitty’s Crim. Law, 327; Bish. Crim. Proc., 150.

"We do not hesitate to say that the intimation in the case of Holton vs. The State, 2 Fla., 504, to the effect that it may well he doubted whether such an entry can be made during the same term after judgment, is entirely unsustained by any authority. It can be done after as well as before judgment, and there is no authority for the distinction there intimated. On the contrary, there is one case in the United States going so far as to direct the court below, after the term has passed, to make its record show by a nunc pro tfwnc entry the fact of presentment in open court. 19 Ark., 189.

The other questions to be considered in this case arise thus. The entry before mentioned as authorized to be made upon the minutes by the court, after the discharge of the grand jury, was (after stating the date and the convening of the court) as follows:

■ “ The grand jury came into open court and made the following presentments, viz: State of Florida vs. James E. Collins—receiving stolen goods, knowing the same to have been stolen.”

After verdict of guilty, the defendant moved in arrest of judgment, on the ground that there was no legal record of thef/ndmg

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Bluebook (online)
13 Fla. 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-state-fla-1869.