In re Losasso

15 Colo. 163
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 15 Colo. 163 (In re Losasso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Losasso, 15 Colo. 163 (Colo. 1890).

Opinion

Chief Justice Helm

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question now presented for consideration is whether or not one charged with murder of the. first degree, the jiunishment for which offense is death, may be admitted to bail after indictment and prior to trial. The practice in the different courts of the state with reference to this subject is not uniform. The present judges of the second judicial district, where petitioners are held in custody, are of opinion that the indictment is conclusive against the right to bail, and therefore decline to consider any application therefor. On the other hand, the judges in most, if not all, of the remaining districts frequently entertain such applications, hear evidence thereon, and occasionally admit to bail. In view of these conflicting opinions and inconsistent holdings, it is important that a definite rule should be announced, so that the procedure in the premises may be uniform throughout the state.

It is difficult to determine' precisely what the ' common-law rules on the subject of bail were when provisions, such as will be hereafter considered and are now made constitutional, were first adopted in this country. Mr. Blackstone says: “ It is agreed that the court of king’s bench (or any judge thereof in vacation) may bail for any crime whatsoever, be if treason, murder, or any other offense, according to the circumstances of the case.” Book 4, ch. 22, p. 299. And he mentions no exception predicated upon the finding of an indictment. But it seems to be well settled that the [165]*165court of king’s bench, as a matter of course, refused bail in all capital cases after return of a true bill, unless some special circumstance, usually arising subsequent to such return, supervened ; also, that in no felony, after indictment, was bail regarded or allowed as a matter of right. The foregoing practice of the court of king’s bench, in relation to capital offenses, has become a fixed rule in California, Louisiana, New York, Iowa and North Carolina. It is held in those states that after indictment ’ for a capital felony the presumption of guilt is so strong as to be conclusive against admission to bail. State v. Mills, 2 Dev. & B. 552; Hight v. United States, 1 Morris (Iowa), *407; Territory v. Benoit, 1 Mart. (La.) 142; People v. McLeod, 1 Hill, 377; People v. Tinder, 19 Cal. 539.

We have only discovered two cases in the federal courts directly upon this question, viz., United States v. Jones, 3 Wash. C. C. 224, and the celebrated trial of Aaron Burr for treason. In the former case Jones, one of the defendants, 'was admitted to bail upon the ground of illness; but as to Beese, another of the defendants, Mr. Justice Washington disposes of the application, without argument, in the fol-. lowing language: “ The bill of indictment being found, we do not feel ourselves at liberty to inquire into the evidence against it.” Upon return of the indictment against Aaron Burr, application for bail was made to Chief Justice Marshall, who presided throughout the trial. The learned chief justice remarked (see page 94) that he “had never known a case similar to the present when such an examination had-taken place.” He also insisted “ upon the necessity of producing adjudged cases to prove that the court could bail a party against whom an indictment had been found.” But on page 95 he is represented as saying: “ I have only stated my present impression. This subject is open for argument hereafter.” Mr. Burr was thereupon committed to jail, and whether subsequently any authorities were cited or arguments heard upon the question we are not advised. No ruling thereon, or further reference thereto, appears in the [166]*166volume. It is a significant circumstance that there was at this time (A. D. 1807) in Yirginia, where Burr was tried, no such constitutional provision on the subject of bail as now exists in this and other states. In United States v. Stewart, 2 Dall. 343 (A. D. 1795), upon this question, language is used which seems to concede the possibility of an examination for admission to bail in such cases; but the point was not necessarily involved, and the decision cannot be considered authority.

Precedents from the federal courts upon the subject in hand thus appear to be extremely meager and unsatisfactory ; but, so far as the federal cases go, they point to a sanction of the common-law rule.

The supreme courts of the following states, however, have promulgated a different doctrine: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Mississippi, Ohio, South Carolina and Texas. The view adopted in these states is that the indictment, even in capital cases, is simply presumptive evidence of the guilt of the party charged, and that courts should, upon application, hear proofs, and, if the presumption be overcome, admit to bail. Ex parte Hammock, 78 Ala. 414; Ex parte White, 9 Ark. 222; Thrasher v. State, 26 Fla. -; Lynch v. People, 38 Ill. 494; Ex parte Kendall, 100 Ind. 599; Street v. State, 43 Miss. 1; State v. Summons, 19 Ohio, 139; State v. Hill, 3 Brev. 89; Yarborough v. State, 2 Tex. 519.

Each of the foregoing lists of cases from the state courts might be largely augmented by other decisions of the same tribunals; but, as the opinions referred to express what is believed to be the law at the present time in the states mentioned, additional citations therefrom are deemed unnecessary.

Although the above reference to adjudicated cases shows contrariety- of judicial opinion on the subject before us, it may fairly be said that the preponderance of authority in this country is against the common-law doctrine. And we think this preponderance of authority is more in harmony [167]*167with, the policy and purposes of modern constitutional and legislative action.

It must be borne in mind that the legal penalty for crime is inflicted only upon conviction, and that the object of imprisonment before trial is safe-keeping, not punishment. If the presence of the accused for trial could be otherwise assured, imprisonment would doubtless be entirely dispensed with. So anxious were the framers of the constitutions, state and federal, to guard against abuses in this direction that they prohibited the exaction of “ excessive bail; ” i. e., more than will be reasonably sufficient to prevent evasion of the law by flight or concealment. It is likewise to be remembered that trial does not and cannot, as a rule, so speedily follow presentment, in this and other rapidly growing western commonwealths, as in England, where the common-law doctrine under consideration had its origin.

Most, if not all, of the state constitutions, now contain provisions substantially similar to section 19 of our Bill of Hights, which reads as follows: “ That all persons shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, except for capital offenses, when the proof is evident, or the presumption great.” It will be observed that this constitutional provision is entirely silent as to the status of the prosecution. It does not say that upon indictment for a felony, or for a particular kind of felony, the beneficent privilege conferred is withdrawn. On the contrary, its terms are broad enough to include persons accused of any crime whatever, after as well as before indictment. The only exception expressly made has reference to capital offenses, but this exception is wholly inoperative if the proof of guilt be not evident, and the presumption great.

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15 Colo. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-losasso-colo-1890.