State Ex Rel. Farley v. Kramer

169 S.E.2d 106, 153 W. Va. 159
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1969
Docket12745
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 169 S.E.2d 106 (State Ex Rel. Farley v. Kramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Farley v. Kramer, 169 S.E.2d 106, 153 W. Va. 159 (W. Va. 1969).

Opinions

Calhoun, Judge:

In this proceeding in prohibition instituted in this Court pursuant to its original jurisdiction in cases of this character, David H. Farley, the relator, seeks to prohibit Honorable H. Nickell Kramer, Judge of the Circuit Court of Summers County, and Honorable Thomas L. Read, Prosecuting Attorney of Summers County, as respondents, from proceeding to try the relator upon an indictment for murder returned against him on May 21, 1968, by a grand jury during the regular May, 1968, term of the Circuit Court of Summers County. The indictment charges the relator with having theretofore murdered one Robert H. Bailey. It is the third indictment, two prior indictments for the same offense having been held by the trial court to be invalid at the instance of the accused, the relator in this case.

In the prohibition petition, the relator asserts that “he should be forever discharged from prosecution for the offense” charged in the indictment by reason of the provisions of Code, 1931, 62-3-21, as amended, which statute, so far as pertinent to this case, provides:

Every person charged by presentment or indictment with a felony or misdemeanor, and remanded to a court of competent jurisdiction for trial, shall be forever discharged from prosecution for the offense, if there be three regular terms of such court, after the presentment is made or the indictment is found against him, without a trial, unless the failure to try him was caused by his insanity; or by the witnesses for the State being enticed or kept away, or prevented from attending by sickness or inevitable accident; or by a continuance granted on the motion of the accused; or by reason of his escaping from jail, or failing to appear according to his recognizance, or of the inability of the jury to agree in their verdict; * * *.

[161]*161On May 31, 1968, a rule in ■ prohibition was issued against the respondents and made returnable before the Court on September 4, 1968, at ten o’clock a.m., and, pursuant to the prayer of the prohibition petition, further proceedings in the trial court were suspended pending a decision by this Court. The case was continued thereafter from time to time until April 22, 1969, on which date the case was submitted for decision upon the prohibition petition; upon an answer and a demurrer to the petition filed by and in behalf of the respondents, with accompanying exhibits filed with and made a part of the answer; upon a demurrer to the answer; upon a “reply and replication” to the answer, together with exhibits filed with and made a part of the reply and replication; upon a writing filed by and in behalf of the relator which is designated as “petitioner’s motion for writ of prohibition notwithstanding the answer of respondents”; and upon briefs in writing and oral argument of counsel.

Code, 1931, 51-2-lk, as amended, provides that three regular terms shall be held each year for the Circuit Court of Summers County, to commence, respectively, on the second Tuesday of January, the third Tuesday in May and the second Tuesday in September. The first indictment upon the charge of murder was returned at the September, 1966, regular term. We are not directly concerned in this case with that term of court for the reason that, at that term, the case was continued on the motion of the relator to the regular January, 1967, term of court and meantime he was released on bond. An accused is not entitled to count, under the statute, “any term at which he procured a continuance * * * on his own motion, or otherwise prevented a trial thereof.” State v. McIntosh, 82 W. Va. 483, pt. 4 syl., 96 S. E. 79. In any event, the “term at which the indictment is returned is not to be counted in favor of the discharge of a defendant.” State ex rel. Smith v. DeBerry, 146 W. Va. 534, pt. 1 syl., 120 S. E.2d 504.

[162]*162The case was set for trial on January 19, 1967, during the regular term of the circuit court. On January 7, 1967, the first day of the term, the relator, by counsel, filed numerous motions and pleadings including a demurrer, a motion to quash the indictment, a plea in abatement and a “Plea in Bar of Prosecution and Motion to Discharge Defendant from Prosecution,” copies of all of which motions and pleadings were filed by court orders, copies of which orders are filed as exhibits with and made a part of the answer to the prohibition petition. On January 10, 1967, during the regular January term, the trial court entered an order which contains the following language:

“And the Court after hearing argument of counsel on said Demurrer, Motion to Quash and Plea in Abatement is of the opinion and doth hold on said Plea of Abatement that the selection and the empaneling of the Grand Jury of Summers County at the regular September, 1966 term was not in the manner and method as provided by the statute of the State of West Virginia, and the indictment in this case is therefore void, which Plea in Abatement is therefore sustained. (Italics supplied.)
“And the defendant shall go hence without day.”

The indictment having been held void at the instance of the relator and he having been permitted, therefore, to “go hence without day,” it is obvious that he was not at that stage remanded for trial upon a presentment or an indictment. There was no pending presentment or indictment upon which he could have been tried. According to an exhibit filed with the reply and replication to the respondents’ answer, a new warrant for the relator upon the same charge of murder was obtained and, at a preliminary hearing held by a justice of the peace on January 13, 1967, the relator was held on such murder charge for the action of the next grand jury of Summers County. By an order entered by the trial court on January 20, 1967, upon a petition filed in behalf of the relator, he was permitted to be released on bond in the penalty [163]*163of $2,000 conditioned upon “his appearance on the first day of the next regular May 1967, term of this Court and not depart thence without leave of the Court.” He was not at that stage remanded to a court of competent jurisdiction “for trial,” within the meaning of the “three term” statute here in question. He was merely released under bond to await the action of a subsequent grand jury.

At the regular May, 1967, term of the circuit court, a new indictment, the second indictment, was returned against the relator alleging the same charge of murder which had been alleged in the initial indictment which, at the instance of the relator by counsel, the court had held to be void. During that regular term of court, on June 2, 1967, the relator, by counsel, filed, in relation to the second indictment, numerous motions and pleadings, including a motion to quash the indictment, a plea in abatement, a plea in bar and a demurrer.

In the relator’s reply and replication he alleges: “* * * Petitioner’s attack on the indictment in May 1967, was based primarily on the fact that the Jury Commissioners had intentionally excluded women from the Grand Jury, and the Court dismissed the May 1967 indictment for that reason.” In any event, it is obvious that, at the instance of the relator, the trial court was urged to hold that the indictment returned at the May, 1967, regular term was not a valid indictment upon which he could be legally tried.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.E.2d 106, 153 W. Va. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-farley-v-kramer-wva-1969.