State v. Brumfield

209 P. 120, 104 Or. 506, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 40
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 209 P. 120 (State v. Brumfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Brumfield, 209 P. 120, 104 Or. 506, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 40 (Or. 1922).

Opinion

McBRIDE, J.-

The bill of exceptions is very meager, none of the testimony produced at the trial [509]*509being brought up, except as to the admission of certain applications for life insurance; and but for the statements of counsel in their respective briefs, this court stands as entirely uninformed as to the facts of this case as the average citizen who reads the newspapers. Barring the objection to the admission of the applications for insurance before alluded to, there is no contention here as to the admission or rejection of evidence. The principal ground relied upon by defendant on this appeal is the action of the court in refusing defendant’s application for change of venue and its action in overruling challenges made by defendant to certain jurors. There are also objections made to the action of the court in overruling defendant’s motion to quash the indictment, all of which will be discussed in this opinion. We will consider the objections urged by defendant’s counsel in their chronological order.

The assignments of error relied upon by defendant’s counsel are: First, the refusal of the court to quash the indictment; second, the refusal of the court to grant a change of venue; third, the action of the court in overruling defendant’s challenges to certain jurors; fourth, the admission by the court of applications made by defendant for life insurance in favor of his wife; fifth, the giving of certain instructions to the jury and the refusal by the court of certain requests for instructions; and sixth, the unconstitutionality of the statute prescribing the death penalty for murder in the first degree.

The first objection is to the refusal of the court to quash the indictment, and the basis of this exception is the fact that Joseph L. Hammersley, a resident of Portland, was permitted to be in the grand jury room and examine witnesses during the prog[510]*510ress of the investigation before that body. This objection is based upon Section 1424, Or.-L., which provides :

“No person other than the district attorney or a witness actually under examination can be allowed to be present during the sittings of the grand jury.”

However, it appears from the undisputed record that Joseph L. Hammersley was regularly appointed and sworn as a deputy prosecuting attorney for Douglas County and as such attended sessions of the grand jury while this case was being investigated. It is claimed and is probably true that he was then a resident of Multnomah County, but he was at least a de facto officer, and the court very properly refused to try out the title to the office collaterally. For all the purposes of this case he must be treated as a regularly appointed deputy prosecuting attorney.

It also appears from the affidavit that on August 16, 1921, the court made an order calling a special term of court for August 29, 1921, and directing a panel to be drawn for such special term. It is charged that the grand jury for the then existing term had not been discharged but was “recessed” subject to call by order of the court, and that on August 29th a new grand jury was drawn from the panel summoned for the special term. The sole objection to these proceedings is that the case should have been submitted to the grand jury of the previous term instead of the new grand jury. The court as a court submits nothing to any grand jury. Cases in which the parties are held to appear automatically go before a grand jury, if that body is then in session, or if such is not the case, to the next grand jury in session. Granting for the sate of argument that the previous grand jury was actually in session [511]*511when the defendant was held to answer and that his ease was not submitted or acted upon, but passed over, it does not follow that such neglect would operate as an acquittal or discharge from liability to an investigation by a subsequent grand jury. The convening of the special term on August 29th had the effect to discharge the panel of the previous term, including the grand jury, and there is no contention as to the regularity of the drawing and impaneling of that grand jury.

The argument of counsel for defense when reduced to its concrete terms is this: (1) There was a grand jury at .recess and subject to call by the court when defendant was held to answer. (2) The court should have called it and the case should have been submitted to it. (3) By Reason of the failure so to do, the next grand jury was powerless to find an indictment. And the logical conclusion would be that if the next grand jury could not indict, then no subsequent grand jury could indict, and the defendant, even though as guilty as the trial jury found him, would go unwhipped of justice. This analysis, which we assume to be fair, presents a proposition so shocking to every conception of justice that it amounts to a reductio ad absurdum.

In this state the courts have always refused to allow mere technical objections to the method of impaneling a grand jury to enable a defendant to escape the consequences of a trial upon the merits: State v. Witt, 33 Or. 594 (55 Pac. 1053); State v. Bock, 49 Or. 25 (88 Pac. 318).

The next objection made is to the action of the court overruling defendant’s motion for a change of venue on account of such prejudice against the defendant in Douglas County as would preclude him [512]*512from having a fair trial in that community. Attached to the motion are several newspaper articles from the “Roseburg News Review,” the “Portland Journal” and other papers having a large circulation in Douglas County, purporting to give an account of the alleged murder and commenting in the severest terms on the conduct of the defendant and asserting his guilt in unstinted, not to say intemperate, language. It is evident that whatever feeling against the defendant these articles tended to create was not confined to Douglas County, but the accounts were spread all over the state and on account of the singular and unique character of the crime and the consequent wide publicity which the circumstances of its commission had attained, there was probably not a man in the state capable of being a juror who had not become acquainted in some degree with these newspaper articles and formed some tentative opinion from the perusal of them. So general had been the publicity thus given that it does not seem probable that a removal of the case from defendant’s home county where he had resided for many years and, in the language of his severest critics, “had occupied the pinnacle of the highest culture,” would have given him any advantage or secured him a more impartial jury than that obtained in his own county.

Beyond the newspaper articles which speak for themselves, the affidavits filed by the respective parties are contradictory of each other, reputable citizens who ought to have had opportunities to know the prevailing sentiment of the community being of the opinion that it was not such as to preclude the defendant from being given a fair and impartial trial. The motion for change of venue was made before Judge Hamilton, who resided at Rose-[513]*513burg, aud by Mm denied. The matter was reopened when Judge Bingham was called to preside, and again was denied. Here we have the deliberate judgment of two able and experienced jurists that a change of venue would not promote justice and was unnecessary, and since this was a matter intrusted to the sound discretion of the court we are not prepared to say that such discretion was abused: State v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 P. 120, 104 Or. 506, 1922 Ore. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brumfield-or-1922.