Hanley v. Zenoff

398 P.2d 241, 81 Nev. 9, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 195
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1965
Docket4826
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 398 P.2d 241 (Hanley v. Zenoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanley v. Zenoff, 398 P.2d 241, 81 Nev. 9, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 195 (Neb. 1965).

Opinion

*10 OPINION

By the Court,

McNamee, C. J.:

In December 1962 pursuant to NRS 173.080 an information was filed in Clark County charging petitioner with first degree burglary in violation of NRS 205.060. Upon his arraignment petitioner entered a plea of not guilty to this charge.

In August 1963 petitioner moved for a change of venue upon the ground that he could not receive a fair and impartial trial in Clark County. Motion for change of venue was denied and this action of the respondent court was affirmed on appeal. Hanley v. State, 80 Nev. 248, 391 P.2d 865.

On June 24, 1964 the district attorney filed his affidavit in the proceedings below which states: “Since the date of such filing [of the information] I have learned that the testimony of the person or persons named in the Motion to Amend Information to which this affidavit supports is necessary and material to the prosecution of this criminal action. Such facts were unknown to me at the time of the filing of the information herein.”

The motion to amend the information was granted, and on June 24, 1964 an amended information was filed *11 varying from the original information in the following respects: the names of additional witnesses were added, in describing the nature of the entry the word “wilfully” was deleted, and petitioner was charged with burglary in violation not of NRS 205.060, the burglary statute, but of NRS 200.040, the manslaughter statute.

Petitioner was never arraigned on the amended information and entered no plea thereto. When he appeared for trial by jury on the charge set forth in the amended information, he advised the court he had not been arraigned on the amended information, and he moved the court to permit an arraignment thereon. This request was denied, and the respondent court ordered petitioner to proceed to trial on the amended information without any plea having been entered thereto.

After the jury was selected, petitioner again moved for a change of venue upon the ground that a fair and impartial trial could not be had in Clark County. This motion was denied. Petitioner then moved the court for a stay of proceedings in order to appeal the denial of the motion for a change of venue. This motion also was denied. The day following petitioner filed a written application for removal of the place of trial. By written order this application was denied. From this written order of denial petitioner on October 15, 1964 filed an appeal to this court which is now pending.

On October 26, 1964, pursuant to petitions therefor, this court arrested the proceedings in the court below, and also by writ of certiorari directed respondent court to certify and return to this court a full and complete transcript of its records and proceedings in this matter.

When an information is filed the defendant must be arraigned thereon. NRS 174.010. The arraignment is made in part by reading the information to the defendant, delivering him a copy thereof, and asking him whether he pleads guilty or not guilty thereto. 1 NRS 174.130. If defendant requires it, he must be allowed a reasonable time, not less than one day, to answer the information, and in answer thereto he may move to set it aside, demur, or enter a plea. NRS 174.150. One of *12 the grounds for demurrer is that more than one offense is charged. NRS 174.230(3). After his plea, the defendant is entitled to at least two days to prepare for his trial. NRS 174.530.

When an amended information is filed which changes materially the information to which the defendant has entered a plea, he must be arraigned on such amended information to provide him with the rights guaranteed by NRS 174.130 and NRS 174.150, and the right afforded him by NRS 174.530 after his plea thereto.

While the insertion of the names of additional witnesses would not require a new arraignment to the information as so amended, NRS 173.080 (2), we hold that the amended information by deleting the word “wilfully” in describing the nature of the entry and by containing a charge of manslaughter in addition to the allegations of the particular facts constituting first degree burglary, materially changed the original information, and the petitioner should not be put on trial without being arraigned again. 14 Am.Jur., Criminal Law § 253 (1938).

We wish to add furthermore, without intending to weaken the foregoing, that an information cannot be amended so as to charge an offense not shown by the evidence taken at the preliminary examination. NRS 173.100(3). Whether or not evidence of manslaughter was taken at the preliminary hearing does not appear from the record before us. If in fact it was not, petitioner has never been afforded the right to object to the amended information on this ground.

The action of respondent court in ordering petitioner to proceed to trial on the amended information without a plea having been entered thereto is annulled.

The petition for writ of prohibition presents an independent question.

After the denial of petitioner’s application for removal of the place of trial, petitioner filed his notice of appeal from such denial. The issues presented thereby are *13 whether in a criminal action an appeal lies from an order denying a motion for change of venue and, if so, does the trial court, upon the filing of the notice of appeal thereupon, lose jurisdiction to proceed with the trial pending the determination of the appeal ?

The first of these issues is determined by NRS 2.110 as construed by State v. Alsup, 68 Nev.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
398 P.2d 241, 81 Nev. 9, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanley-v-zenoff-nev-1965.