Ryan v. State

1913 OK CR 35, 129 P. 685, 8 Okla. Crim. 623, 1913 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 8, 1913
DocketNo. A-928.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1913 OK CR 35 (Ryan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. State, 1913 OK CR 35, 129 P. 685, 8 Okla. Crim. 623, 1913 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 45 (Okla. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

*626 FURMAN, J.

(after stating the facts as above). First. Counsel for appellant has filed a lengthy brief in this cause, in which he has cited a number of the decisions of this court, but has not cited the volume and page upon which these decisions will be found in the published reports of this court. We have no objection to counsel citing the Pacific Reporter, but where any decisions of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma or of this court are relied upon the brief should cite the page and volume of the state reports upon which the case can be found. This will greatly expedite our. work. We trust that the lawyers of Oklahoma will comply with this request in the future.

Second. Counsel contends that the judgment should be reversed in this cause because a plea was not entered to the indictment until after the jury had been impaneled and sworn.to try the case. The record discloses that on the 5th day of April, 1910, defendant was duly arraigned and given 24 hours in which to plead, and that thereafter, on the 11th day of April, 1910, the case was regularly called for trial, .and that the defendant appeared in person and by his attorneys and announced ready for trial, and that thereafter, on the 12th day of April, 1910, after the jury had been impaneled and sworn, the defendant refused to plead when the county attorney made his opening statement to the jury, and that the court thereupon ordered that a plea of not guilty be entered for him.

The general tendency of appellate courts now is to disregard technical objections which do not in any manner prejudice the substantial rights of the defendant. It appears that the defendant announced ready for trial without any objection being entered to his not having pleaded to this indictment; the record clearly showing that he was arraigned thereon. Some of the courts hold that where the record shows either an arraignment or a plea, but is silent as to one or the other, it may be presumed. Steagald v. State, 22 Tex. App. 464, 3 S. W. 771; Wilson v. State, 17 Tex. App. 525. Other cases also hold that the omission of the record to show arraignment and plea is not fatal, where the record shows that the issue was joined and a fair trial had without objection by the defendant. Hayden v. State, 55 Ark. *627 342, 18 S. W. 239; State v. Bowman, 78 Iowa, 519, 43 N. W. 302; Commonwealth v. McKenna, 125 Mass. 397; Territory v. Shipley, 4 Mont. 468, 2 Pac. 313; Allyn v. State, 21 Neb. 593, 33 N. W. 212; State v. Brown, 33 S. C. 151, 11 S. E. 641; People v. Weeks, 165 Mich. 362, 130 N. W. 699; State v. Bunker, 7 S. D. 639, 65 N. W. 34; State v. Reddington, 7 S. D. 368, 64 N. W, 170.

In State v. Reddington, supra, the Supreme Court of South Dakota, from which state our statute was taken, had the following to say :

“Considering the matters complained of in the order in which they occurred chronologically, we notice that the record nowhere states or affirmatively shows that the defendant, now plaintiff in error, was arraigned, or that he pleaded to the indictment. The statute requires that the defendant shall be arraigned (Compiled Laws, sec. 7263); that he shall plead; and that his plea shall be entered on the minutes of the’ court, or, if he refuse,, that a plea of not guilty shall be so entered. Id., secs. 7301, 7303, 7311. If the defendant was not in fact arraigned, and did not plead, it was a grave oversight on the part of the court. If he was arraigned and did plead, it was careless in the clerk not to have em tered the fact and the plea. But the practical question now is: What is the legal effect, either of such omission in fact, or of such defect in the record? There are many reported cases of high authority squarely holding that omission to plead, or failure of the record to affirmatively show that the defendant was arraigned and did plead, are, upon review, fatal to a judgment of conviction; and such seems to be the established rule of the common law. Our own judgment fortified by many thoroughly considered and well-reasoned cases .from courts commanding high respect, leads us to the conclusion that, under the law as it is in this jurisdiction, this ought no.t to be held an imperious and inelastic rule. We should say that it was error, to try a defendant without arraignment and plea, and that a .record is defective which does not affirmatively show such procedure was had; but error does not always justify reversal. Injury is presumed from error, -but the presumption is undermined, and destroyed by the positive showing by the record itself that injury did not and could not result from such error. By ‘injury’ is meant ‘effect upon the result,’ This is the well-defined doctrine of our statute, which allows the defendant to except ‘to the decision of the court .upon a matter of law by which his substantial .rights are preju *628 diced, and not otherwise’ (Comp. Raws, sec. 7439), and which requires this court, on writ of error, ‘to give judgment without regard to technical errors or defects, or to exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.’ Id., sec. 7520. In this case the record does show that the defendant was present in court personally and by his counsel, and that he was ready for trial, and that the trial proceeded precisely as though the minutes of the court showed a plea of ‘not guilty.’ . In State v. Greene, 66 Iowa, 11, 23 N. W. 154, the defendant did not plead, the taking and entering of his plea having been overlooked by the court, and yet the appellate court refused to reverse a judgment of conviction. It said: ‘The case was treated, however, as though a plea had been entered. The allegations of the indictment were all regarded as having been denied by the defendant. The state was required to establish the charge in the indictment by the same character of evidence, and with the same certainty, which would have been required if the formal plea of not guilty had been entered. The defendant was permitted to introduce evidence to disprove the charge, and his counsel was permitted to argue the case to the jury on its merits, and the jury were required to determine it under the same rules which would have governed in its determination if the plea had been formally entered.’ And this ruling was followed in State v. Hayes, 67 Iowa, 27, 24 N. W. 575, and again in State v. Bowman, 78 Iowa, 519, 43 N. W. 302. In People v. Tower, 17 N. Y. Supp. 395, the record did not show arraignment, or that defendant pleaded, or that any plea was entered for him. The court held that ‘there was nothing in these omissions which tended to prejudice the rights of the defendant, and consequently they should be disregarded.” * * *

“We have drawn upon these authorities quite fully, and it is probable that further research would discover others on the same line to justify our conclusions that we ought not to follow the rigid rule of the common law under the plain instruction of our statute that judgment of conviction must not be reversed on account of error which does not prejudice the substantial rights of the defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK CR 35, 129 P. 685, 8 Okla. Crim. 623, 1913 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-state-oklacrimapp-1913.