People v. Follette

240 P. 502, 74 Cal. App. 178, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 193
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 24, 1925
DocketDocket No. 1095.
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 240 P. 502 (People v. Follette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Follette, 240 P. 502, 74 Cal. App. 178, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 193 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

An indictment against the appellant was returned by the grand jury of the county of Los Angeles charging him with the crime of perjury. Certain testimony was set out in said indictment which it was alleged therein was given by the appellant, while testifying as a witness before said grand jury, and it was charged in said indictment that said testimony was false and untrue, and that appellant at the time he gave the same knew it to be false and untrue. Only a small portion of the testimony of appellant, given at the time he was before the grand jury, was set forth in this indictment. The appellant was arraigned upon said indictment and pleaded not guilty to the charge therein contained, and the action was set for trial. Thereafter, and some two weeks before the day of trial, the same grand jury, without calling any additional witnesses, or without taking any further testimony whatever, and without any leave or order of court either permitting any amendment to said indictment, or directing the filing of a new indictment, or directing the case to be resubmitted to the same or another grand jury, returned a second indictment against appellant, again charging him with the crime of perjury. In this new indictment, not only was the testimony which was contained in the original indictment, and which was therein made the basis of the charge of perjury against the defendant, set forth, but other and further testimony, alleged therein to have been given by appellant while testifying as such witness before said grand jury, was set out in said new indictment, and the whole thereof was in said new indictment charged to be false and untrue, and to have been made by appellant with knowledge of its falsity and untruthful *185 ness. A motion was made to set aside this new indictment upon all the statutory grounds. This motion was denied.

The first point made by appellant for a reversal of the judgment herein is based upon the refusal of the court to grant his said motion to set aside said second indictment. The principal ground urged by appellant in support of said motion, and the only one which we will consider upon this appeal, was that said second indictment was not legally found by the grand jury for the reasons: First, that said grand jury was without jurisdiction or power to consider the matter without an order of resubmission, and secondly, that said grand jury was without authority to find said new indictment without hearing further and additional testimony to that presented to them at the original hearing.

As to the power of the grand jury to return a second indictment against a defendant for the same offense charged in the first, the rule is stated in Corpus Juris as follows: “It is generally held that a grand jury may find a valid indictment notwithstanding another indictment is pending against accused for the same offense, and the pendency of the other indictment, where there has been no conviction or jeopardy thereon, is not ground for a plea either in abatement or in bar of the second indictment, . . . although as a rule accused can be tried or put in jeopardy only on one. It has been so held, even though defendant has been arraigned and a plea of not guilty entered on the first indictment. ’ ’ (31 C. J., p. 598.) Numerous authorities are cited by the author of the above work in support of this rule, and they appear generally to sustain the text. Appellant has called our attention to a number of cases decided by the supreme and appellate courts of this state which hold in effect that neither can the district attorney file nor the grand jury present an amended or second indictment where a demurrer has been sustained to the original indictment without obtaining an order of court either permitting the indictment to be amended or submitting the case to the same or another grand jury. This is in accord with section 1008 of the Penal Code and is undoubtedly the rule enunciated in the following cases: Ex parte Williams, 116 Cal. 512 [48 Pac. 499]; Copeland v. Superior Court, 62 Cal. App. 316 [217 Pac. 573]; Ex parle Ha-yter, 16 Cal. App. 211 [116 Pac. 370]. These eases are not decisive of the point now under *186 consideration, for the reason that no demurrer was sustained to the original indictment returned herein against the defendant, but the district attorney, for reasons best known to himself, had the grand jury return a second indictment while the original indictment was in full force and after the defendant had entered his plea thereto.

The case of Thompson v. United States, 202 Fed. 401 [47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 206, 120 C. C. A. 575], is a case very similar to the present action. This case arose in this state, but was brought in the federal courts and the decision rendered by the circuit court of appeals -was made in reference to the practice established by our Penal Code in criminal actions. In that action a second indictment had been returned against the defendant in which he was accused of the identical crime embraced in the first indictment after he had entered his plea and the ease had been set for trial. It does not appear that the court made any order permitting the district attorney to amend the indictment or directing the case to be resubmitted to the grand jury. The court said, page 403, “The contention is that under the law of California, which it is said became the rule of practice for the federal courts in that state, a grand jury Avhich has once indicted a defendant is disqualified to bring in a second indictment against him charging him with the same offense. . . . Counsel for plaintiff in error cite three decisions—■ People v. Hanstead, 135 Cal. 149 [67 Pac. 763]; People v. Bright, 157 Cal. 663 [109 Pac. 33]; People v. Landis, 139 Cal. 426 [73 Pac. 153]. ... It is to be observed that all of the decisions of the Supreme Court of California above cited were rendered prior to the change in section 1008 of the Penal Code, which was made in 1905. . . . The section as amended substitutes for the last clause the following: ‘Directs the case to be submitted to the same or another grand jury’—thereby declaring the law of the state to be that a grand jury which had once found an indictment against a defendant was not disqualified to find a second indictment against him upon the same facts, a wise provision of law, and we may Avell wonder why it should ever have been held otherwise, as no substantial reason is apparent why a grand jury after having once found an indictment which is discovered to be defective in form may not, upon the information which it has acquired, and with the same convic *187 tion, based upon that information, that the defendant should be brought to trial, present a second indictment for the same offense.” It may be true, as suggested by appellant, that the point made in that action in support of the motion- to quash the indictment was that “A grand jury which has once indicted a defendant is disqualified to bring .a second indictment against him, charging him with the same offense,” but the court, in deciding said motion adversely to the accused, must necessarily have held that the grand jury had a right to return the second indictment without any order of court directing a resubmission of the case, for the reason we think the record plainly shows that no such order was made by the trial court.

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Bluebook (online)
240 P. 502, 74 Cal. App. 178, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-follette-calctapp-1925.