Cook v. Territory

4 P. 887, 3 Wyo. 110, 1884 Wyo. LEXIS 4
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 4 P. 887 (Cook v. Territory) 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
Cook v. Territory, 4 P. 887, 3 Wyo. 110, 1884 Wyo. LEXIS 4 (Wyo. 1884).

Opinion

Lacey, C. J.

The plaintiff in error was indicted on December 3,1883, in the district court of Albany county, for the killing of James Blount. Trial was had upon the indictment, resulting in a verdict of guilty. The court below overruled the motion for a new trial, and pronounced judgment and sentence of death upon the verdict. The evidence is all in the record by bill of exceptions. The case is prosecuted here by petition in error. The petition in error makes 13 assignments of error, as follows:

“(1) That the court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant herein to quash the indictment in this cause found and returned; (2) that the court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant herein in his plea to the jurisdiction of the said district court; (3) that the court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant for a continuance of thesaid cause to the next ensuing term thereof; (4) that the said court erred in giving the instructions to the jury offered and asked for by and on the part of the prosecution, on the trial of said cause, and numbered 1, 2, 3, 4%, 5, and 6, respectively; , (5) that the court erred in refusing to give the instructions offered and asked for by the said defendant on the trial of said cause; (6) that the said court erred in its instructions and remarks given and addressed to the jury on the trial of said cause of„its own motion; (7) that thesaid court erred in overruling the motion of the said defendant for a new trial of the said cause on the ground of all and every reason therein alleged by the defendant, to the overruling of which motion the defendant excepted at the time; (8) that the jury in said cause, after being sworn therein, and before being discharged by the court, were permitted to separate, and did separate; (9) that the said court erred in admitting, over the objection of the said defendant on the said motion for a new trial in said cause, the affidavits of two of the jurors trying the same, to-wit, F. E. Allyn and ¡3. Í3. Woods, and also the affidavit of one Richard Tregoing, the bailiff in charge of said jury and jurors, to which the defendant then and there excepted; (10) that the said court erred in refusing to admit in evidence, and in support of a motion for a new trial in said cause, the affidavit of one Wm. J. McIntyre as to the hostility and bias of one F. E. Allyn, being one of the jurors who tried said cause, to which ruling of the court the said defendant then and there excepted; Til) that the verdict of the said jury that tried said cause was contrary to law and the evidence adduced at said trial of said cause; (12) that the verdict of the said jury did not define the crime of which the said defendant was found guilty, and was and is irregular, defective, void, and insufficient in law to warrant the said court to pass sentence and judgment thereon ; (13) that the said judgment of the said court and the sentence thereon is and was contrary to law and the evidence in said cause. ”

The third, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, eleventh, and twelfth assignments state causes for a new trial. Comp. Laws, p. 162, § 181. It was therefore necessary that they should be assigned as causes in the motion for a new trial in the court below, after which the question upon each would be properly raised by an assignment of error in this court calling in question the ruling upon the motion for a new trial. These assignments of error, therefore, do not present anything for the decision of this court, and will not be considered, although the same questions may be considered so far as they arise under the seventh assignment.

It remains to determine the questions raised by the first, second, seventh, ninth, tenth, and thirteenth assignments in the petition in error. The causes stated in the motion to quash the indictment are as follows:

“First, because the said indictment was not found and returned by a grand jury returned, tried, impaneled, sworn, and charged according to law at the said October, A. D. 1883,-term of this said court;' second, because the said indictment was not found hy the grand jury, drawn, returned, tried, impaneled, sworn, and charged, and afterwards discharged by the court at this regular term of said court; third, because the said indictment purports to be found by said grand jury [113]*113returned, tried, impaneled, sworn, and charged on the fifteenth day of October, A. D. 1883, by the said court, and thereafter discharged, and before said crime and crimes charged in said indictment were committed as alleged in said indictment; fourth, because the said alleged crime and crimes set forth in said indictment are therein charged as havingbeen committed ■on the thirtieth day of November, A. D. 1883, and long after said grand jury had been charged, sworn, and discharged; fifth, because said indictment is inconsistent, irregular, defective, and void; sixth, because the same does not state any crime or crimes, offense or offenses, punishable under the laws. of the territory of Wyoming. ”

15y reference to the Criminal Code (Comp. Laws, p. 152, § 101) it will be seen that a motion to quash reaches only defects which are “apparent upon the face of the record.” There is nothing apparent upon the face of the record in the case at bar which shows the existence of the facts relied upon in any one of the first four causes in the motion to quash. On the contrary, the record, after giving the venue, the title of the court, and of the ■cause, contains the following recitals:

■ “Be it remembered, that in the above •case in the said court there was returned into the said court, at the October term, A. D. 1883, thereof, by the grand jury in attendance thereon, and filed in said court ■on the third day of December, A. D. 1883, ■an indictment in said cause, in the words and figures following, to-wit:
“‘Indictment. Territory of Wyoming, •County of Albany — ss.: In the district court of the Second district, at a term of the district court begun and held in the town of Laramie City, within and for the county of Albany, on the fifteenth day ■of October, A. D. 1883, the jurors of the grand jury of the county of Albany, good and lawful men, then and there returned, tried, impaneled, sworn, and charged according to law to inquire, etc., * * * do present,’” etc.

If one grand jury was discharged and another impaneled, asís contended in argument, there is no intimátion of it“ upon the face of the record.” As to the fifth and sixth causes in the motion to quash, we are unable to find any material defect in the indictment, nor have counsel for the plaintiff in error attempted to point out any defect. There was no error in the ruling upon the motion to quash the indictment. The plea to the jurisdiction attempts to call in question, for irregularities not apparent upon the face of the record, the organization of the grand jury. Under our statutes that question-can only be raised by challenge or plea in abatement. See Comp. Laws, p. 151, § 100 et seq.; also, 1 Bisb. Crim. Broe. §§ 871-889.

Twenty causes are stated in the motion for a new trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 P. 887, 3 Wyo. 110, 1884 Wyo. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-territory-wyo-1884.