State v. Avery

125 P.2d 803, 102 Utah 33, 1942 Utah LEXIS 37
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1942
DocketNo. 6364.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 P.2d 803 (State v. Avery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Avery, 125 P.2d 803, 102 Utah 33, 1942 Utah LEXIS 37 (Utah 1942).

Opinions

KELLER, District Judge.

Walter Robert Avery, the appellant, was convicted in the District Court of Weber County of murder in the first degree for the killing of Hoyt L. Gates, a police officer, on February 11, 1941. According to the uncontradicted evidence of the state, the appellant was engaged in the furtherance of an armed robbery of a grocery store in Ogden, Utah, at the time of the slaying. In the course of the robbery, Officer Gates was summoned to the scene by telephone. He was but a short distance inside the store when appellant commenced firing at him; one of the bullets from appellant’s weapon severed a large blood vessel in the abdomen of the deceased and he died from internal bleeding within a very few minutes. Appellant was taken into custody by other officers at the scene of the shooting, and, on March 12, 1941, a jury returned a verdict finding appellant guilty of murder in the first degree as charged in the information, which is as follows:

“Information No. 4018. Walter Robert Avery, having heretofore been duly committed by Charles G. Cowley, a committing magistrate of this County to this Court, to answer this charge, is accused by the District Attorney of this Judicial District, by this information, of the crime of Murder in the First Degree, a felony, committed as follows, to wit: The said Walter Robert Avery did murder Hoyt L. Gates on the 11th day of February, 1941, in the County of Weber, State of Utah.
“John A. Hendricks, District Attorney, “Second Judicial District.”

The appellant’s specifications of error, six in number, relate to the sufficiency of the information, and may be disposed of by a determination of but two questions, viz.,

(1) Does the information comply with the requirements of the statutes of the State of Utah ?

*35 (2) Does the information conform to the requirements of the Constitution of the State of Utah?

It is convenient, in giving the answers to these questions, to have before us pertinent provisions of our Code of Criminal Procedure, and we now quote from Chapter 21, Revised Statutes of Utah 1938, as the same is amended by the Session Laws of Utah 1935, c. 118:

“105-21-1. Forms and Sufficiency of Pleadings Determined by This Code.
“The forms of pleadings in criminal actions, and the rules by which the sufficiency of such pleadings is to be determined, are those prescribed by this code.”
“105-21-8. Charging the Offense.
“(1) The information or indictment may charge, and is valid and sufficient if it charges the offense for which the defendant is being prosecuted in one or more of the following ways:
“(a) By using the name given to the offense by the common law or by a statute.
“(b) By stating so much of the definition of the offense, either in terms of the common law or of the statute defining the offense or in terms of substantially the same meaning, as is sufficient to give the court and the defendant notice of what offense is intended to be charged.
“(2) The information or indictment may refer to a section or subsection of any statute creating the offense charged therein, and in determining the validity or sufficiency of such information or indictment regard shall be had to such reference.”
“105-21-47. Forms for Certain Offenses.
“The following forms may be used in the cases in which they are applicable:
* * * *
“Murder — A. B. murdered C. D.”

Following the direction of 105-21-1, we conclude that the information complied with what is required by Section 105-21-8 (1) (a) by the use of the language, “is accused * * * of the crime of murder in the first degree,” as the same is used in the information, and complies as well with the form provided by 105-21-47. Add *36 ing to what is authorized by the statutory form, the accuser has also alleged the date and place of the crime.

The appellant contends, however, that under the law of this state there is no such crime as murder in the first degree. The answer to this contention is clearly given by consideration of the following statutory provisions of the Revised Statutes of Utah 1933:

Sec. 103-1-11 defining “crime”; Sec. 103-28-1 defining “murder”; Sec. 103-28-3 dividing murder into two degrees and defining each; and Sec. 103-28-4 prescribing the penalty for first and second degree murder.

The provisions of these sections are interrelated and interdependent, so to speak, and from them we may make a number of conclusions, neither of which bears out the contention of the appellant. We may logically say that murder is a crime because it is an act punishable by death, or, upon recommendation of a jury, imprisonment for life, if of the first degree; or by imprisonment for a term not less than ten years and which may be for life, if of the second degree. Or, it is equally sound to say that the three sections considered together create two crimes: Murder in the first degree, because a punishment by death or life imprisonment is provided for the killing of a human being with malice aforethought, committed under the circumstances or having the qualities of premeditation and deliberation provided in the first sentence of 103-28-3; murder in the second degree, because a punishment of imprisonment of not less than ten years and which may be for life for the killing of a human being with malice aforethought, where the circumstances of aggravation which are present in murder of the first degree are absent, and under such circumstances as would have constituted murder at common law. But whether we consider murder in the first degree as only a grade or degree of murder, or as a separate crime, it is nevertheless a crime as defined by Section 103-1-11, supra.

By the recital that the defendant was accused of murder in the first degree, the accuser made the information def *37 inite and certain as to the punishment that would be demanded.

This court has given its approval to an accusation pleaded by making reference to the name assigned the crime by statute in the case of State v. Anderson, 100 Utah 468, 116 P. 2d 398, 399. In that case, the information charged as follows:

“That Jess Anderson on the 25th day of February, A. D. 1940, at the county of Salt Lake, State of Utah, did commit the crime of involuntary manslaughter, as follows, to wit: Jesse Anderson killed Clark Romney without malice contrary to the provisions of the statute of Utah * *

In sustaining this information, the Court said:

“It is noted that under Section 105-21-8, supra, the information is sufficient if it charges the offense for which the defendant is being prosecuted by using the name given to the offense by statute.”

The information complies in all particulars with the statutory requirements of this state pertaining to criminal accusations.

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Related

State, in Interest of Gonzales
545 P.2d 187 (Utah Supreme Court, 1975)
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211 F. Supp. 545 (D. Colorado, 1962)
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129 P.2d 560 (Utah Supreme Court, 1942)
State v. Robbins
127 P.2d 1042 (Utah Supreme Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
125 P.2d 803, 102 Utah 33, 1942 Utah LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-avery-utah-1942.