State v. Blood

37 A.2d 452, 70 R.I. 85, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 27, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 452 (State v. Blood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Blood, 37 A.2d 452, 70 R.I. 85, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 20 (R.I. 1944).

Opinions

*87 Baker, J.

Indictment for murder. At a trial in the superior court a jury found the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree. The trial justice denied his motion for a new trial and thereafter he duly prosecuted to this court his bill of exceptions containing fifty-one exceptions which he is now pressing.

The present indictment was heretofore before this court on defendant’s bill of exceptions and a new trial was then ordered. State v. Blood, 68 R. I. 160. The instant trial was held following the entry of that order. In general it is the contention of the state that in the early morning of September 5, 1940, on the premises at 22 Perrin avenue in the city of Pawtucket, where the defendant, and his wife lived, he inflicted severe injuries upon her with malice aforethought, from which injuries she died at the Memorial Hospital in that city about 3 p.m. on the same day. The defendant, who was a witness, testified that he did not strike or injure his wife in any manner whatsoever and that he had no knowledge of how she received the above-mentioned injuries which caused her death. The evidence does show, however, that, in explanation of such injuries, he voluntarily asserted on various occasions and to different persons. that she fell, either by accident or design, from a window in the room occupied by them on the third floor of the house on Perrin avenue onto a concrete driveway.

*88 Shortly prior to the trial now under consideration the defendant/while he was held in the county jail without bail, moved that the instant indictment be dismissed because he had not been tried or bailed within six months of his plea thereto in accordance with general laws 1938, chapter 625, §57. This motion was denied by a justice of the superior court and his decision is the basis of the defendant-ant’s first exception.

In this connection the following facts appear in evidence: On September 16, 1940 the defendant was indicted for the murder of his wife Muriel Blood. He was arrested under that indictment October 9, 1940, was arraigned the same day, pleaded not guilty and was committed to the county jail without bail, where he has remained except when he has appeared in the superior court. On December 3, 1940 he was placed on trial under this indictment in the superior court before a jury. That trial ended December 21, 1940, the jury returning a verdict that the defendant was guilty of murder in the second degree. On December 26, 1940 he filed his motion for a new trial, which motion was heard January 3, 1941 by the trial justice and was denied by him March 7,1941.

Thereafter the defendant duly prosecuted his bill of exceptions to this court, and on June 18, 1942 its opinion was filed sustaining an exception to the charge of the trial justice and remitting the case to the superior court for a new trial. That trial, being the one now under review, was begun in the superior court November 23, 1942 and was concluded December 2 of that year. The defendant testified that during the period of his imprisonment he had requested many times to be released on bail, but that his requests had not been granted; also, that commencing December 27, 1940 and at different times during the succeeding two months, he demanded in writing of the trial justice and of the attorney general another trial under the indictment.

The defendant contends that it was error to deny his motion, because the state had not complied with the pro *89 visions of §57, supra, in that he was not “tried” before the time set out in this section, which reads in part as follows: “Every person who shall be indicted for any of the crimes named in § 17 of this chapter, and shall be imprisoned under the indictment, shall be tried or bailed within 6 months next after the time at which he shall plead to such indictment, if he demand a trial . . . .” Murder is one of the crimes named in §17. The defendant argues that a trial under that section means a trial according to law and that this court in State v. Blood, supra, decided that his first trial did not comply with that requirement, and that he was at that time not convicted according to law because the charge of the trial justice \iolated one of his fundamental rights. The defendant contends, therefore, that his first trial, by reason of said error, was merely a purported trial and that he was not lawfully tried within six months of his plea to the indictment.

We cannot' accept as sound the defendant’s above contentions. In our opinion, the trial which was held in the superior court in the month of December 1940 satisfied the provisions of article I, sec. 10 of our state constitution regarding the trial of criminal prosecutions, and also fully complied with the terms of §57, having been held with due formalities in the proper court before a jury within two months after the defendant had pleaded to the indictment. While this court later held that the defendant, because of prejudicial error in the charge, was not convicted according to law at his first trial, it did not hold, and it does not follow, that the defendant was not then tried according to law within the intent and meaning of the statute.

It is clear that the defendant was so tried. Section 57, which is designed to permit a defendant under certain circumstances to be tried or bailed within a specified time, does not directly or by implication provide that a trial, if otherwise properly held, shall of necessity be without error in order to be considered a lawful trial within the meaning of the statute in question.

*90 We have carefully considered the authorities which the defendant has called to our attention as lending support to the position he has taken in arguing this exception. However, we find those authorities clearly distinguishable from the instant case. In this category we include the case of Deslovers, Petitioner, 35 R. I. 248. The defendant’s first exception is therefore overruled.

In the present trial the trial justice, at the request of the state and over the defendant’s objection, impaneled two additional jurors, making fourteen in all. These additional jurors sat and were kept with the others during the trial until the charge of the court was completed and the case was given to the jury for its consideration, at which time they were discharged. The action of the trial justice in impaneling these two additional jurors is the ground of the defendant’s second exception. The statute under which the trial justice acted is public laws 1940, chapter 936, sec. 32%, and it reads in part as follows: “Whenever in the opinion of the court the trial of a civil or criminal case before a jury is likely to be a protracted one, the court may, immediately after the jury is impaneled and sworn, direct the calling of 1 or 2 additional jurors, to be known as alternate jurors.”

In excepting to the impaneling of these two additional jurors the defendant’s attorney gave as a reason for his action his opinion that the above-quoted statute was unconstitutional in respect to certain specified parts of the constitutions of the United States and of this state respectively.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A.2d 452, 70 R.I. 85, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-blood-ri-1944.