State v. Blanchard

159 A.2d 304, 156 Me. 30, 1960 Me. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 9, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 159 A.2d 304 (State v. Blanchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Blanchard, 159 A.2d 304, 156 Me. 30, 1960 Me. LEXIS 5 (Me. 1960).

Opinion

Dubord, J.

This case is before us on report under the provisions .of Section 15, Chapter 103, R. S., 1954.

According to an agreed statement of facts, one Frederick Blanchard, hereinafter referred to as the respondent was indicted at the April 1957 Term of the Superior Court within and for the County of Aroostook, upon the charge of assault with intent to kill and murder. After commitment to the Bangor State Hospital for observation and report as to his sanity, the respondent was returned to the aforesaid Superior Court for trial at its September 1957 Term. At this term, a nolle prosequi was entered to that part of the indictment which charged intent to kill and murder.

At this September 1957 Term, upon arraignment, the respondent pleaded guilty to the indictment in its amended form and was sentenced to be imprisoned at hard labor for not less than two nor more than four years in the state prison; execution of this sentence was suspended, and the respondent was placed on probation under the provisions of Chapter 387, P. L., 1957, for a term of four years, conditioned on his entering Veterans’ Facility at Togus, forthwith, and accepting such treatment for such period of time as said Veterans’ Facility should recommend, and that the respondent further report to the probation officer forthwith and on the first day of each month during said term.

On the 15th calendar day of said September 1957 Term, being the 28th day of September, 1957, the respondent was in court present with counsel, whereupon the aforesaid *32 sentence of imprisonment was revoked by the same presiding justice who had pronounced it; the said presiding justice ordered that the nolle prosequi hereinbefore referred to should stand without prejudice; that the respondent be permitted to withdraw his plea of guilty without prejudice; thereupon, without further plea by the respondent, the presiding justice ordered that the case be marked “continued;” and bail was set by the presiding justice and furnished by the respondent for his appearance at the next Term of Court in said County of Aroostook, when criminal cases would be in order for trial, namely, the November 1957 Term of said Court.

At the November 1957 Term of said Court, counsel for the respondent withdrew. Respondent was present in court in person, but without counsel, and was notified by the justice presiding at said Term, who was not the same justice who had presided at the September Term, that the original probation was in full force; and thereupon, the case was ordered by the presiding justice to stand continued on the docket.

At the ensuing April, September and November 1958 Terms of the aforesaid Court, when criminal cases were in order for trial, the case against the respondent was still further continued upon order of the court.

On January 27, 1959, a complaint on the part of the probation officer, was filed in the aforesaid Superior Court, then in vacation, addressed to the resident justice of said court, charging that the respondent had violated the terms of the probation imposed upon him by the presiding justice of the Superior Court at the September 1957 Term. Upon this complaint, a capias was ordered to be issued upon which the respondent was arrested on February 8, 1959 and confined in Aroostook County Jail until March 21, 1959, when he obtained his release on bail for his appearance at the *33 April 1959 Term of said Superior Court to be held in Houlton.

To the allegations contained in the complaint for violation of probation, the respondent filed pleadings in which he set forth the contention that the presiding justice at the September 1957 Term was without authority to suspend the execution of the sentence, for the reason that this action on his part was an exercise of the pardoning power specifically reposed by the Constitution in the executive department of the State. In other words, the respondent attacked the constitutionality of Section 6, Chapter 387, P. L., 1957, as being in contravention of Article III, Sections 1 and 2, and of Article V, Part First, Sections 1 and 11 of the Constitution of Maine. Respondent further contended in his pleadings that if the provisions of the probation statute did not infringe upon the Constitution, that the probation decreed upon the original sentence was annulled, when the presiding justice, at the same Term of Court at which the sentence was pronounced and probation imposed, revoked the sentence and permitted the respondent to withdraw his plea of guilty, and ordered the case continued without further plea.

To these contentions of the respondent, the State countered that the provisions of Chapter 387, P. L., 1957, insofar as they relate to the suspension of execution of a sentence and the placing of a convict upon probation were constitutional ; and that the attempted revocation of the sentence by the presiding justice at the September 1957 Term was without authority, since it was not made before adjournment of the same term at which it was pronounced; and because, before such revocation, the respondent had already begun the execution of his sentence having come under the control and custody of a probation officer, who the State says is an officer of the executive branch of the government.

*34 After a hearing on the complaint charging violation of probation, the presiding justice ruled that the provisions of Chapter 387, P. L., 1957, relating to suspension of execution of a sentence and imposition of probation, was not in violation of the Constitution of Maine; that the presiding justice at the September 1957 Term was without authority to revoke the sentence previously pronounced; that there had been a violation of the terms of the probation; and that the respondent should abide the terms of the original sentence of imprisonment.

The execution of the sentence was stayed pending a decision of the Law Court upon the issues presented.

According to the agreed statement of facts, the case comes before us for determination on the following issues:

“(1) The constitutional validity of that part of Chapter 387 of the Public Laws of Maine, 1957, which permits the court to suspend execution of the sentence, and to place on probation, a person convicted of a criminal offense.
“(2) Under the agreed statement of facts and the records herein presented, did the presiding justice, at the September 1957 term of said Superior Court, have authority to revoke the sentence and probation that he had previously pronounced and imposed?”

We think it is of importance to first dispose of the question as to whether or not the action of the presiding justice at the September 1957 Term took place at the same term of court at which the original sentence was imposed. A determination of this issue requires interpretation of subsection II, Section 11, ft. S., 1954, relating to the September Term of the Superior Court in Aroostook County. The statute provides that there shall be a term of court “at Houlton on the 2nd Tuesday of September for criminal business and by adjournment at Caribou for civil business,”.

*35 The docket entries show that court was held in Houlton from September 10, 1957 to September 20, 1957 for the disposal of criminal business.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A.2d 304, 156 Me. 30, 1960 Me. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-blanchard-me-1960.