State ex rel. Dickerson v. Reynolds
This text of 97 So. 334 (State ex rel. Dickerson v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Relator is indicted for slander, alleged to have been committed in Winn parish on July 29, 1922. He was arrested, and on October 7, 1922, was released on bond, conditioned for his appearance in the district court of the Fifth judicial district at its term beginning October 16, 1922.
On the first day of the October term, Hon. R. W. Oglesby, the regular judge, of said district, recused himself in said ease, and appointed Hon. J. B. Grow, Judge of the Fourth Judicial District, to sit and try the case, which was set for trial on December 14, 1922, and on said date relator was found guilty. No motion was then filed for a new trial, but this right was reserved to relator, who was released on bond after conviction.
Judge Grow having been appointed to fill a vacancy on the Court of Appeal of the Second Circuit, and having gone on the bench of that court, on April 16, 1923, Judge J. E. Reynolds of the Third Judicial District was appointed to sit and try the case. On April 19, 1923, relator filed a motion for a new trial on the grounds that the conviction was contrary to the law and the evidence, and that the statement assigned as slanderous was a privileged communication. On the same day this motion was overruled, no evidence having been adduced at its trial, “for the reason that it is not good in the opinion of the court, and comes too late.”
As the special judge had not heard the witnesses in the ease, and as no evidence was offered on the triai of this motion, he was not in a position to say whether the conviction was contrary to the evidence or not, and was therefore unable to properly dispose of said motion by overruling it.
Nor are we of opinion that, under all of the circumstances of this case, the motion for new trial was filed too late. „
The case had been tried by Judge Grew, a special judge, who had left Winn parish on the same day of the trial, and before any motion-for new trial had been filed. The right of relator had been reserved to file this motion at the time, without any time limit being fixed for his so doing. The hasty departure of Judge Grow was necessitated by the press of business in his own district. No objection was made to the filing of this motion, when tendered, as far as the minutes disclose. We therefore have an exceptional state of facts presented in this case. While motions for new trials in criminal cases should be made timely when trials are had before regular judges; this rule must be relaxed in cases of special judges, whose attendance cannot be always opportunely had, and especially where, as in the present case, the delay was caused by the laches of the state, if any, in calling in a second special judge. .The motion was filed seasonably for new trial before the special judge in this case. The mere filing of the motion in the clerk’s office long prior to the sitting of the special judge in this case would not have facilitated the trial of the motion, as the regular district judge had recused himself.
The record contains a notation of exceptions and reservation of a bill to the action of the special judge in overruling th.e motion for a new trial, and the error complained of is moreover patent on the face of the record, thereby dispensing with the ne[117]*117cessity of a formal bill of exceptions in tbe case.
We are of the opinion that relator is entitled to relief.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the sentence imposed upon relator be set aside, that a new trial be granted, and that this case be remanded to the lower court for trial according to law.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
97 So. 334, 154 La. 114, 1923 La. LEXIS 1901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dickerson-v-reynolds-la-1923.