Reddy v. Snepp

357 F. Supp. 999, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14655
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 6, 1973
DocketC-C-73-9
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 357 F. Supp. 999 (Reddy v. Snepp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reddy v. Snepp, 357 F. Supp. 999, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14655 (W.D.N.C. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

McMILLAN, District Judge.

Petitioners Reddy, Grant and Parker were convicted by a jury, in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, Superior Court, of the unlawful burning of a barn and fifteen horses in violation of North Carolina General Statutes, Chapter 14, Section 62. They ask this court, via habeas corpus, for relief from what they say are excessively high appeal bonds.

The burning occurred in 1968.

Petitioners were not accused of the crime until 1972.

Before trial, petitioners were allowed to be at liberty under signed bonds of $1,000 each for Reddy and Grant, and $500 for Parker. They reported for and attended the trial without incident.

Upon return of the verdict on July 15, 1972, Judge Frank W. Snepp, presiding, sentenced petitioners to prison terms of twenty years for Reddy, twenty-five years for Grant and ten years for Parker. Each gave notice of appeal, and appeal bond was set for each at $50,000.

Petitioners were ordered into immediate custody. Because of delays in getting a transcript of the evidence, the appeals have not yet been heard at any level.

Petitioners have not been able to make the required bonds and have remained in jail ever since the trial.

Petitioners sought reduction of their $50,000 bonds in the North Carolina Court of Appeals, which directed the trial judge to conduct a hearing, make findings and reconsider the'bonds.

Judge Snepp conducted a hearing and on August 8, 1972, entered an order pursuant to the ruling of the Court of Appeals. He found, based upon testimony at the trial and at the bond hearing, (1) that Grant and Reddy pose a substantial danger to the community and that Parker poses a lesser danger, and (2) that there is a substantial possibility that the petitioners if at liberty pending the determination of the appeal will flee the jurisdiction * * *. He ordered bond continued in the amount of $50,000 for Grant and Reddy. As an alternative, he ordered that petitioners might be released upon a secured bond for Grant and Reddy of $35,000, plus a personal recognizance containing various conditions, including conditions that each petitioner not leave the county, observe a 9:00 p. m. curfew, avoid communication with the other petitioners, keep the court advised of his whereabouts, and execute a waiver of extradition and consent that “upon any infraction of these restrictions being reported to this court, capias immediately issue without notice * * *»

Parker’s bond was reduced to $25,000 with the alternative of a $15,000 bond coupled with the same conditions required of Grant and Reddy.

Petitioners sought certiorari in the North Carolina Supreme Court. The petition was denied on January 3, 1973, and this action was filed on January 12, 1973. An evidentiary hearing was conducted on February 5,1973.

Before the February 5, 1973 hearing, Mr. Robert Max Blackburn, the Clerk of Superior Court, who has the duty of passing on bail bonds, had indicated that he would not accept a property bond which was signed by several different sureties unless each one of the sureties was worth the entire amount of the penalty of the bond. At the hearing, however, Mr. Blackburn testified that after taking counsel he is now willing to accept a property bond signed by several *1001 bondsmen if the aggregate of their, financial capacity after proper checking of the titles to the land or other property involved exceeds the penalty of the bond. However, he said that hé preferred one bondsman who could stand good for the entire amount. He also indicated that since some unpleasant experiences had arisen involving two former bondsmen, now deceased, he was not currently accepting bonds from any individual in amounts exceeding $5,000. There are thus some major problems in the way of petitioners’ obtaining bonds, even' under the revised rules described by the Clerk of Court.

Although the petitioners were tried together, and although they join in this petition, the court is of the opinion that each petitioner is an individual and that the question of his right to relief should be treated as an individual proposition rather than as part of a “situation.”

James Earl Grant, Jr. in May of 1972 had been tried in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, Raleigh, North Carolina, and had been convicted of conspiring to help and providing help in enabling two individuals named Washington and Hood (the chief prosecution witnesses in the present case) to leave the jurisdiction and go to Canada to avoid prosecution on an unrelated charge. He is unmarried and has lived only a few years in Charlotte. The trial judge in view of these facts could reasonably have concluded as to Grant that he was likely to leave the jurisdiction if set free on appeal bond, especially in view of the extremely heavy sentence (twenty-five years) imposed for the crime for which he was convicted.

No relief will be ordered in the case of Grant.

Washington and Hood were the two principal witnesses against Reddy, Grant and Parker; they and their families were supported in beach cottages at the expense of the prosecution for several months pending the trial; they testified that they took part in the barn-burning with Reddy, Grant and Parker; they were given amnesty in return for their testimony against Reddy, Grant and Parker, and were not prosecuted for the barn-burnings; they now, though charged with crimes such as robbery and murder, are at large on bonds far less than those required of Reddy, Grant and Parker.

T. J. Reddy is twenty-six, married, and just short of obtaining his AB degree from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He has lived in this community since 1964. His wife is a Charlotte legal secretary. He owns no real estate. At the time of the trial he was an employee of the CHARLOTTE OBSERVER, and had been active in urban community center work. He was not involved in helping Washington and Hood evade trial in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina. Neither was Parker. Reddy has no record of violence and no prior criminal record.

Petitioner Parker is twenty-four, unmarried, lives with his mother and attended the University of North Carolina at Charlotte for three and one-half years. He was employed by the Mecklenburg County Mental Health Department. He has had one conviction for possession of heroin, for which he served a year’s active sentence and received a three-year suspended sentence.

Reddy and Parker raise several objections to their bonds:

1. That the special conditions attached to the alternate lower bond are unconstitutional. The conditions do not appear unconstitutional to this court.

2. That the Clerk of Superior Court unwarrantedly added extra burdens to the already heavy bonds by refusing to allow the bonds to be signed by several people whose aggregate assets might equal the total penalty. Mr. Blackburn’s willingness, announced at the hearing in this court, to accept a bond signed by a group of people and secured by all their assets, appears to have cured that problem.

*1002 3. That the amount of the bonds is so high as to constitute excessive bail under the Constitution.

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Related

Purvis v. State
343 A.2d 898 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
357 F. Supp. 999, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reddy-v-snepp-ncwd-1973.