Ferguson v. Bechly

277 N.W. 755, 224 Iowa 1049
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 15, 1938
DocketNo. 44214.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 277 N.W. 755 (Ferguson 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
Ferguson v. Bechly, 277 N.W. 755, 224 Iowa 1049 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

ANDERSON, J.

The petitioner in this case, E. B. (Lash) Ferguson, was charged jointly with another in a county attorney’s information, filed in the district court of Mahaska County, with the crime of larceny alleged to have been committed in June, 1935. The subject of the larceny being a bunch of cattle. Ferguson was tried separately for the offense charged, was found guilty and appealed to this court from a judgment committing him to the penitentiary. Upon appeal to this court the case was reversed because of the giving of two erroneous instructions and was remanded for retrial. See former opinion, State v. Ferguson, 222 Iowa 1148, 270 N. W. 874. Following the filing of the opinion in the former appeal a procedendo was sent from the office of the clerk of this court to the clerk of Mahaska County district court on the 25th day of January, 1937. The next term of the Mahaska County district court, after the filing of the procedendo, commenced on February 8, 1937. On February 17, 1937, after hearing on the question of whether or not the case should be assigned for trial, the trial court made an order assigning said ease for trial on Monday, March 1, 1937, at 1:30 p. m. On Saturday, February 27, 1937, the defendant, Ferguson, filed a motion objecting to the jurisdiction of the Mahaska County district court to hear and determine the ease on the ground that the cause was pending in the supreme court, and that a notice of intention to petition for rehearing had been filed by the defendant, Ferguson. On the same day the defendant, Ferguson, also filed a motion for a change of venue from Mahaska County. On March 1st, the day the cause was assigned for trial and the jury called to try (it, the motion objecting to the jurisdiction of the court was overruled and the motion for change of venue was sustained and the cause ordered transferred to the district court of Jasper County for trial. The cause was assigned for trial at the next term of court in Jasper County as the first jury trial for the April, 1937, term, which commenced on the 5th day of April. The case was assigned for the second Monday of the term, April 12, 1937. On the 9th day of April, 1937, it being shown to the supreme court by the defendant that he, the defendant, had a petition for rehearing pending, this court recalled the pro- *1051 eedendo that bad theretofore been issued and filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of Mahaska County. Upon the filing of the order of this court recalling the first procedendo the case was removed from the list of cases assigned for trial, and the defendant’s petition for rehearing having been overruled, later a second procedendo was issued by this court and filed in the district court of Jasper County, Iowa, on about the 12th day of May, 1937. The April, 1937, term of the district court of Jasper County was still open but the trial work had all been disposed of and the jury had been discharged on the 29th day of April. The court remained in session during the summer months only for the purpose of taking care of orders and probate matters which is the usual procedure in rural districts. The following term of court in Jasper County convened in September, 1937, and the case was placed upon the assignment for .trial on the 20th day of September, 1937. On the day the case was reached for trial the defendant, Ferguson, filed a motion to dismiss the information on the ground that the defendant was not brought to trial in accordance with the provisions of section 14024 of the Code, and that he was Inot afforded the speedy trial guaranteed to him under the constitution. This motion was overruled by the court and from such ruling the defendant, Ferguson, prosecutes this action in certiorari.

Code, section 14024, upon which the petitioner in this proceeding relies is as follows:

“Delay in trial. If a defendant indicted for a public offense, whose trial has not been postponed upon his application, be not brought to trial at the next regular term of the court in which the indictment is triable after the same is found, the court must order it to be dismissed, unless good cause to the contrary be shown.”

The petitioner contends that under the facts in this case he was not brought to trial at the next regular term after the information was filed and by reason of the failure of the state .to so bring the case to trial the information should now be dismissed.

We cannot follow the petitioner in his argument or logic. This man Ferguson was charged with the larceny of cattle. He was tried at once and Convicted. That conviction *1052 was reversed by this court because of error iu instructions and the ease was sent back to Mahaska County for retrial. It was assigned for trial at the next term of the district court in that county but for some reason best known to the petitioner a petition for rehearing was filed in this court by the petitioner which, while it was promptly overruled when it was finally submitted, served as a basis to prevent the retrial of the case in Mahaska. County at the term of court next following the reversal in this court. The case was again assigned for trial in Mahaska County and on the day that it was reached for trial a motion for a change of venue to another county was filed and sustained and the case was transferred to Jasper County for trial. The second procedendo issued by this court was filed in the district court of Jasper County, as we have above stated, on the 12th day of May, 1937, at a time when that court was in session only for routine matters, the jury for the term having been excused and discharged some two weeks prior to the time the procedendo was filed. The case was later assigned for trial for the next succeeding term of that court which was September, 1937, and on the day it was reached for trial the petitioner’s motion to dismiss the information was filed and overruled. We are unable to see how a more urgent or persistent course could have been pursued by the prosecuting authorities to finally get this case to trial than was followed in this case. Practically two years elapsed after the first trial resulting in a conviction before the appeal from such conviction was finally disposed of by this court, and all of the moves made by the defendant, Ferguson, seem to have been to delay the final trial of this case on its merits.

We have had this particular section of the Code before us on several prior occasions and we have held that when a judgment against a defendant is reversed such reversal shall be deemed an order for a new trial, and that when a new trial has been granted a defendant he need not be tried at the same term of court. And we have also held that where the defendant has been tried and the jury disagree a retrial need not be had at the same term. State v. Bige, 198 Iowa 573, 198 N. W. 510; State v. Ellington, 200 Iowa 636, 204 N. W. 307; State v. Enke, 85 Iowa 35, 51 N. W. 1146; Davison v. Garfield, 219 Iowa 1258, 1262, 257 N. W. 432, 434, 260 N. W. 667, and Id., 221 Iowa 424, 426, 265 N. W. 645, 646.

*1053 We are unable to convince ourselves that this section of the statute above quoted has anything to do with when a defendant shall be entitled to trial after a reversal in the supreme court and after the procedendo has been forwarded to the trial court.

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Bluebook (online)
277 N.W. 755, 224 Iowa 1049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-bechly-iowa-1938.