State Ex Rel. Magnuson v. District Court of First Judicial Dist.

231 P.2d 941, 125 Mont. 79, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 92
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1951
Docket9050
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 231 P.2d 941 (State Ex Rel. Magnuson v. District Court of First Judicial Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Magnuson v. District Court of First Judicial Dist., 231 P.2d 941, 125 Mont. 79, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 92 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE METCALF:

This is an original proceeding by which the relator seeks to set aside an order suppressing evidence made by the Hon. George W. Padbury, judge of the first judicial district.

The facts summarized are: On January 30, 1950, the county attorney of Lewis and Clark county asked leave of court to file an information charging John P. Phillips with the crime of receiving stolen property. Leave was granted by the Hon. A. J. Horsky, judge of the first judicial district, presiding in department No. 1 of that court. The cause was assigned number 2655 by the clerk of court.

On April 29,' 1950, the defendant John P. Phillips moved to suppress certain evidence. This motion was based upon Phillips’ affidavit, whereby Phillips asserted that the deputy sheriff and two state stock inspectors had seized this evidence from his premises without a search warrant or legal process of any kind. The motion and the affidavit in support of the motion raised a question of fact concerning the manner in which the state of Montana came into possession of the evidence in question. In the hearing that took place on the motion, the evidence produced was sharply conflicting.

On May 5, 1950, in cause No. 2655, the State of Montana v. John P. Phillips, the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence and return the property came up for hearing in department No. 1 of the district court of the first judicial district. The county attorney objected to the matter being heard at that *81 time before the Hon. George W. Padbury, presiding judge of department 2.

Defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence was sustained on November 14, 1950. Thereafter the county attorney brought this original proceeding to set aside and annul Judge Padbury’s minute entry granting the defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence.

In his petition he alleges that: ‘ ‘ The usual practice followed in the District Court of the First Judicial District of the State of Montana, in and for the County of Lewis and Clark, with reference to the trial of criminal cases, is that the Hon. George W. Padbury, Jr., Judge of Department No. 2, tries all such criminal cases; that in this particular case the Hon. George W. Padbury, Jr. announced that in view of the fact that he intended to appear as a defense witness for and on behalf of said defendant, John P. Phillips, he deemed it improper for him to preside in said criminal matter; that because of the foregoing reasons it was agreed that the Hon. A. J. Horsky would preside in this particular criminal action; that both the Hon. A. J. Horsky and the Hon. George W. Padbury, Jr. agreed that from and after the filing of said information the Hon. A. J. Horsky would preside thereon.”

On March 10, 1951, this court issued an alternative writ ordering the district court of the first judicial district and the Hon. George W. Padbury, Jr., one of the judges thereof, to appear on the 23rd day of March, 1951, and show cause why the minute entry suppressing the evidence in the case of State v. Phillips should not be vacated, annulled and set aside and further, why the Hon. George W. Padbury, Jr. should not be enjoined from further participating in said cause as presiding judge thereof.

On the return day the Hon. George W. Padbury, Jr., in behalf of the district court of the first judicial district appeared by counsel who filed a motion to quash. Judge Padbury filed an affidavit in which he stated that: “He is the presiding Judge in the case of the State of Montana v. John Phillips, *82 ■which is a criminal cause and in which the defendant is charged with receiving stolen property; that he advised the office of the .County Attorney of Lewis and Clark County, Montana, and others, subsequent to the filing of the information above referred to, that because of the fact that the defendant had called him on the telephone relative to some of the facts in said case, he would not preside at the trial in said cause, but he did not at any time advise any person whatsoever that he felt disqualified to, or that he was disqualified to hear a motion to suppress evidence in the above entitled cause; that said motion to suppress evidence involved a matter of law entirely unrelated to any of the facts involved in the trial of said cause; that he did not at any time agree that the Hon. A. J. Horsky should preside in said cause after the filing of the information therein. ’ ’

The merits of the motion to suppress the evidence are not before us. The only question before us is whether the Hon. George W. Padbury, Jr. was authorized to preside at the hearing of the motion.

R. C. M. 1947, section 93-321, provides for the apportionment of the business of the court in districts having more than one judge. “The judges elected or appointed to hold office in each judicial district, having more than 'one judge, may divide the court into departments, prescribe the order of business, and make rules for the government of such court. They must apportion the business of the court among themselves as equally as may be, but in case of their failure to make such apportionment for any cause, the supreme court, upon application of any interested person, shall make an order apportioning such business, and cause the same to be entered upon the minute book of the district court in each county in such district, and such order shall remain in full force and effect until modified or repealed by the authority making it. ’ ’

Prior to the Fourteenth Session of the Legislature in 1915, R. C. M. 1947, section 93-321, which was then section 6278, Revised Codes of 1907, merely empowered the judges in a district where there was more than one judge to divide the *83 court into departments, prescribe the order of business, and make rules for the government of the court not inconsistent with the Constitution or the statutes of the state.

Under this power the district court of the first judicial district had, on March 10, 1905, made such rules.

In 1914 the case of State ex rel. Little v. District Court, 49 Mont. 158, 141 Pac. 151, was decided by this court. That case arose as follows: Rule No. 2 of the district court of the first judicial district provided: “All criminal causes and matters of a criminal nature are hereby assigned to department 1.” Judge Smith, presiding judge in department No. 2 called a grand jury and one Howard Little was indicted. He was brought before Judge Smith for arraignment and objected that under rule 2 Judge Smith had no authority to proceed with the case. The objection was overruled. Then Little appeared in department No. 1, presided over by Judge Clements, and moved to quash the indictment. This motion was granted, and the defendant ordered discharged.

This court held that upon a change in the personnel of the court, there may be a reapportionment of its business. But “because'a distribution of business is personal to the judges, it is not a subject within the purview of court rules; and rule No. 2, adopted in 1905, while effective as the expression of the will of the judges in office at that time, is not binding upon the present judges.

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Bluebook (online)
231 P.2d 941, 125 Mont. 79, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-magnuson-v-district-court-of-first-judicial-dist-mont-1951.