Dayton v. Bechly

241 N.W. 416, 213 Iowa 1305
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 8, 1932
DocketNo. 41038.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 241 N.W. 416 (Dayton v. Bechly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dayton v. Bechly, 241 N.W. 416, 213 Iowa 1305 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

On May 29, 1929, the county attorney of Keokuk County prepared a county attorney’s information, under section 13645 of the 1927 Code, charging Koith Dayton, the petitioner, with “wilfully and unlawfully transporting intoxicating liquor.” Thereafter, on the same day, the county attorney and the petitioner, Koith Dayton, appeared before the respondent, the Honorable Frank Beehly, in Oskaloosa, at the courthouse in Mahaska County. Thereupon, the county attorney’s information was presented to the respondent, who approved the same. The petitioner, in writing, pleaded guilty thereto and was sentenced by the respondent to “be imprisoned in the county jail of Keokuk County, Iowa, at hard labor for the term of six months and pay the costs of prosecution included in which is a fee of $50.00 for the county attorney, but during good behavior this sentence is suspended as to imprisonment, and during such suspension defendant is paroled into the custody of H. A. Beasley, who will report to the court as to the defendant’s conduct.”

Accordingly, the petitioner was at large under the aforesaid parole until March 24, 1931, when the respondent revoked the parole and suspension of sentence and ordered the sheriff of Keokuk County to arrest and confine the defendant in the county jail of said county for a period of six months, as provided in the original order, an excerpt from which is above set forth. Claiming that the respondent was without jurisdiction under the circumstances to revoke the parole and confine the petitioner, the latter obtained from a judge of this court a writ of certiorari commanding the respondent to certify and return fully to this court a transcript of the records and proceedings relating to the order of revocation and imprisonment.

I. It is contended by the petitioner that the respondent did not have jurisdiction or legal authority to act in the premises because the original sentence for the offense named was entered in Mahaska County during term time of the district court in Keokuk County, where the county attorney filed his *1307 information. Such- term time is distinguished by the petitioner from the vacation period of the court. As a basis for his argument, then, the petitioner declares he could be sentenced in Mahaska County only during the vacation period of Keokuk County Distinct Court. Except during such vacation period, the petitioner insists that in view of the statute he could be sentenced under a county attorney’s information only in Keokuk Comity.

Mahaska and Keokuk Counties are in the same judicial district, but, of course, they are separate and distinct governmental subdivisions of the state. Section 13645 of the 1927 Code, above mentioned, declares: ,

“The county attorney may, at any time when the grand jury is not actually in session, file in the district court, either in term time or in vacation, - an information, charging a pérson with an indictable offense.” (The italics are ours).

Koith Dayton, the petitioner, was charged with an indictable offense. When the county attorney of Keokuk County prepared and filed the aforesaid information, the grand jury of that comity was not in session. However, it is insisted by the petitioner that the aforesaid county attorney’s information was prepared, filed, and presented to the respondent in Mahaska County at and during a term of the district court of Keokuk County.

On April 16, 1929, the term of the Keokuk County district court in question was convened. That term was not adjourned sine die until on the first day of August, 1929, thereafter. This term of the Keokuk County district court was held, not by the respondent, but by the Honorable D. W. Hamilton, a Judge thereof. A recess during the aforesaid term of the Keokuk County district court was ordered by the Honorable D. W. Hamilton on May 23/1929, to extend until June 11 of that year. It was during that recess period that the county attorney prepared and filed the information aforesáid, and the respondent accepted the petitioner’s plea of guilty and sentenced him, as previously explained. Sections 13666 and 13667 of the 1927 Code provide respectively:

“13666. An accused prosecuted on information may, in vacation, be arraigned by any judge of the district court, and, *1308 in vacation, be required to plead to the information before any such judge.”
‘ ‘ 13667. ‘ Arraignments can be made and pleas required, in vacation, only before such judge sitting in chambers at the usual place of holding court in the county in which the information was filed, or in any other county of the judicial district, or in any county to which the cause may be sent on change of venue.” (The italics are ours.)

If, then, the respondent sentenced the petitioner in Mahaska County during vacation as that term is contemplated by sections 13666 and 13667, above quoted, the proceeding was legal and valid. But, if the respondent’s act in the premises was not performed during vacation as thus comprehended, the action would be without jurisdiction and wholly void. The chapter of the 1927 Code under consideration furnishes no specific definition of the word “vacation.” Consequently, it is necessary to look elsewhere for a definition.

An argument is made for the respondent upon the theory that the recess period aforesaid constitutes a vacation as contemplated by the statutes above quoted. In support of that proposition, the respondent cites State v. Stevens, 67 Iowa 557; Thompson v. Benepe, 67 Iowa 79; State v. Van Auken, 98 Iowa 674; Denison v. Brotherhood of American Yeoman, 191 Iowa 698. Those cases hold in effect that “vacation,” as contemplated by the subject-matters there discussed (issuance of an injunction) may mean a period of recess during a term of court as distinguished from the interim between terms. When determining the meaning of the word “vacation” in legislation relating to the courts, much depends upon the surrounding circumstances and the purpose of the statute. To illustrate, it is said in Thompson v. Benepe (67 Iowa, 79), supra, reading on page 81:

“There cannot be, we think, a fixed and definite meaning given to the word ‘vacation.’ That it ordinarily means the time between terms is undoubtedly true. See Bouv. Law Diet. But whether this meaning should be given to the word in. any particular instance depends upon the subject-matter, and the necessity which exists that some other meaning should be adopted. ’ ’

It is to be noted in the'first place that the word “vacation,” as used in the legislation in connection with the courts, *1309 ordinarily means, according to the Thompson case, “the time between terms.” Unless, then, there is some persuasive or necessary reason why that meaning does not apply to the term “vacation” used in the statute under consideration in the case at bar, we should adopt the usual and ordinary interpretation of the word. Thompson v. Benepe (67 Iowa 79), supra; Jones v. McClaughry, 169 Iowa 281.

The Jones case, supra, considered an analogous question under the very legislation involved in the case at bar.

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241 N.W. 416, 213 Iowa 1305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayton-v-bechly-iowa-1932.