Cummins v. People

4 Colo. App. 71
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Colo. App. 71 (Cummins v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cummins v. People, 4 Colo. App. 71 (Colo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Bissell, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This verdict, sentence and judgment cannot be upheld, even though they are abundantly sustained by the testimony, and the punishment would be evidently righteous.

In June, 1891, John Cummins, the plaintiff in error, was proceeded against before a justice of the peace in Las Animas county, on divers charges of obtaining money by false pretenses. The justice committed him to jail iu default of giving a bond of two thousand dollars. Subsequently habeas corpus proceedings were instituted by Cummins to secure his release, based principally on the contention that, since the crime with which he was charged was committed in the carrying out of an unlawful agreement between him and the prosecuting witness, the acts could not legally be counted criminal, and he was therefore entitled to his discharge. He was unsuccessful in these proceedings and remained in jail. The district court met in Las Animas county in-September at its regular term, and, presumably because these habeas corpus proceedings were pending, no action was taken at that term [73]*73of the court looking to the disposition of the case. Cummins was not indicted, nor was any application made for his release. This was equally true at the January term of the court. At that term a venire was issued for the grand jury returnable at the March term. At this time, the grand jury was impaneled, and on the 16th of March they returned two indictments against Cummins. The indictments were alike in substance and form, and charged Cummins with obtaining money by means of false pretenses and in such a manner as to constitute grand larceny. In one case, the money which he took was charged to be the property of one R. A. Greenfield, and to have been taken on the 23d day of October, 1890. In the other, the money was charged to have been the property of Adam Feiner, and to have been taken on the 26th day of November, 1890. The defendant made various motions to quash, asked for a change of venue in the case, and attacked the legality of the grand jury. These matters need not be considered, since the case will be disposed of on two other grounds which are fatal to the judgment. Before the trial commenced, the district attorney made a motion to consolidate the two cases and try them together. The court granted the motion notwithstanding the objections of the defendant, and thereupon the trial proceeded as upon the two indictments, and evidence was introduced in support of both the charges. These are all the facts that need be stated concerning the history of the cause, and bearing on one of the main questions discussed, except as to a petition which the defendant filed at the beginning of the March term.

As will be remembered, nothing was done concerning the indictment or trial of the defendant during two whole terms, to wit: the September and January terms of the district court of Las Animas county, to which he was recognized by the justice before whom the preliminary examination was had. At the beginning of the March term, Cummins filed a petition for his discharge under the habeas corpus act, on the ground that two terms of the district court had been held, and no proceedings had been taken with reference to his trial.

[74]*74Cummins insists that the court erred in respect of both these matters. This contention is well founded.

The court is clothed with ample power to consolidate criminal causes wherever, under the law, the crimes are of the sort that they may be properly joined in one indictment and the defendant put to trial thereon. General Statutes, § 945; (Mills’ Ann. Stat. § 1452). This statute is in reality but an embodiment of a well established principle of the common law, and is no broader than was that rule unless it be in the consolidation of causes, and confers no greater power than that enjoyed and exercised prior to the enactment of the statute. This is clear from the very terms of the statute for the words of limitation, “ which may be properly joined,” must evidently have been inserted as a restriction upon the general right to consolidate or join different offenses in one indictment which otherwise the section would confer. To give the statute full force and to give effect to all its terms necessitates this conclusion, and it is only necessary to ascertain by a consideration of well settled rules what crimes may be property joined in one indictment. This determination will also settle what cases may be consolidated in case different indictments are found by the grand jury. It has always been holden with reference to felonies that only one transaction can be embraced in a single indictment. The acts done may result in the commission of several different statutory or common law crimes, but wherever the felonies are separate and distinct, and not provable by the same evidence, and have been committed at different times, so that they can in no sense be deemed to result from the same series of acts, they may not be joined in one indictment; and consequently, if several indictments be found, the court is powerless to order the cases consolidated. Bishop on Criminal Procedure (2 ed.) vol. 1, §§ 448-9 et seq.; Goodhue v. The People, 94 Ill. 37; People v. Aikin, 66 Mich. 460; People etc. v. Fisher, 37 Kas. 404; Kelly v. The People etc., 17 Colo. 130.

Manifestly, the felonies charged in these two indictments could not be consolidated without an infraction of this rule. [75]*75The money was obtained at two different times — in October and in November — and from two different people, to wit: Greenfield and Feiner, and there was no connection, even the most remote, between the two transactions. They were two independent felonies which could not have been united in the same indictment, and therefore could not have been consolidated and tried at the same time. Of itself this was a fatal error and must reverse the judgment.

The other proposition is equally conclusive and more unfortunate, since it must result in the discharge of the prisoner, and release him from punishment. We have in this state (General Statutes, § 1609) in the habeas corpus act, a provision that “ If any person shall be committed for a criminal or supposed criminal matter and not admitted to bail, and shall not be tried on or before the second term of the court having jurisdiction of the offense, the prisoner shall be set at liberty by the court unless the delay shall happen on the application of the prisoner.” . . . This is undoubtedly a statutory definition of the constitutional provision which exists in all our state constitutions, as well as in the federal organic law, to wit: — that the defendant in a criminal case shall be entitled to a speedy trial. This speedy trial was undoubtedly analogous to the right which obtained to the defendant at the common law, and which was recognized by the judges who held court under the commission of both oyer and terminer and gaol delivery. Under these commissions, it was the custom of the judges to proceed against the prisoners who were in confinement, and except upon occasion shown to clear the jail of all offenders two or three times a year. Blackstone’s Co., Book 4, chap. 19; Hale’s Pleas of the Crown, chap. 5; United States v. Fox, 3 Mon. 512; Harrington v. The State, 36 Ala. 236; Bouvier’s Law Dict., title Gen. G. D.

Our statute seems to contemplate the same procedure, but gives the right to the defendant to insist upon his discharge by proper proceedings, if he be not tried within the designated time.

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Related

Harrington v. State
36 Ala. 236 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1860)
In re Garvey
7 Colo. 502 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1884)
Kelly v. People
17 Colo. 130 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1891)
Goodhue v. People
94 Ill. 37 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1879)
Ochs v. People
16 N.E. 662 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1888)
State v. Fisher
37 Kan. 404 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1887)
People v. Aikin
33 N.W. 821 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1887)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Colo. App. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummins-v-people-coloctapp-1893.