State v. Daniels

22 So. 415, 49 La. Ann. 954, 1897 La. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 12, 1897
DocketNo. 12,454
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 So. 415 (State v. Daniels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Daniels, 22 So. 415, 49 La. Ann. 954, 1897 La. LEXIS 368 (La. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, C. J.

Defendant was indicted in the parish of Yernon for murder. He applied for and obtained a change of venue, and the cause was transferred for trial to the parish of Sabine. It was there tried. The jury returned a verdict of “ Guilty without capital punishment.” He was sentenced to hard labor in the penitentiary for life, and he appealed.

On Tuesday, the 16th of February, 1897, the second day of the Sabine parish term of court, the case of the State of Louisiana vs. Daniel was fixed for trial for the 23d of the month. On that day defendant, through his counsel, suggesting to the court that the transcript of papers sent up from the parish of Vernon to the parish of Sabine, on a change of venue, was not a complete transcript of proceedings and did not contain ail of the papers filed in the said ease in the Twelfth Judicial District Court for the parish of Yernon (sugg sting certain designated papers as not included therein, which he declared to be material, among the same three certain bills of exception which he alleged he had reserved to rulings of the District Court, and which had been signed by the judge), moved and prayed,' that the clerk of the District Court of Vernon parish be ordered to complete the record by sending up the missing papers and that he be not placed on trial until said record was so completed.

In the body of the motion, after setting forth the absence from the record of certain papers, he alleged that “the proceedings of this case in the parish of Yernon as sent to this court (Sabine) are not properly attested, and that the irregularities complained of would work a hardship to defendant in this case, as there were various matters and pleas that should be filed' in his case in this court (Sabine) in order that justice might be done him, and which could not be filed until all of the papers and proceedings in said case were before this court.”

The court upon this motion ordered the district clerk of Vernon [956]*956to complete the record in the particulars complained of, directing that he send up “ certified copies of all bills of exception, if any, that are not already in here.” The trial was postponed and the case reassigned for the 26th.

On that day the clerk of Vernon presented what was claimed to be the complete record of the case. The clerk certified that “he had carefully searched for the alleged bills of exceptions asked for and had been unable to find them; that he had no knowledge that the same ever existed.”

Defendant thereupon suggesting that the three bills of exceptions already referred to were still missing, also certain newly mentioned papers, and that the transcript was still incomplete, and suggesting that the certificate of the clerk of the court of Vernon to the correctness of the copy of the minutes of the court of Vernon and his certificate to that of the entire record were not sufficient, or such as the court could recognize, in that they were not sealed in such a manner or with such a seal as the law requires the clerks of courts to use, prayed that the answer or return of the clerk be not accepted, that the rule remain in force, and that the trial be postponed until the order of court for the completion of the record was fully complied with.

This prayer the court refused to grant, and defendant reserved a bill. The court in overruling this motion stated that the clerk produced all of the record called for by the defendant on his rule to complete the record that was not already in it and overlooked by him when he filed his rule, except the three bills of exceptions * * * that the court was unable to say whether they were ever signed or not, but their substance had been stated to it, in the rule to complete the transcript and shown by testimony before it on the rule, and the whole matter was in such shape in the record that the Supreme Court would be sufficiently advised to pass upon the questions arising under the bills; it further stated that nothing could be gained by rejecting the answer of the clerk and ordering him to find the bills when he said he knew nothing of them.

It is further said that “the objection urged that the record was not properly attested was aimed at the form of the seal used by the clerk of Vernon in not having on it a pelican feeding its young; that that was the want of correctness urged; that the record and a copy of the orders were sent from Vernon, properly certified under [957]*957the seal of the clerk of the District Oourt of Vernon, and no objection was made that the certificate was insufficient, or that it was not sealed, but only that the seal used was not such a one as the law requires. The seal was of the usual size and shape, and contained the words clerk of court and ex-officio recorder Vernon parish, La.; Also a small star. There was no other picture.”

It appears that counsel of the defendant had, in Vernon parish, insisted upon their right to have certain motions, which they had filed set for trial in the absence of their client then in jail in Rapides parish, but that this right was not conceded by the court, and the motions were postponed for trial until the accused should be present, and they were subsequently so tried. The bills of exception could have had no possible influence upon any proceedings to be had in the parish of Sabine. They could only be utilized for defendant in this court in the event of a judgment against him. We see enough of the •questions at issue to know that the action of the court, in respect to the matters complained of, could have worked no possible injury to the defendant. The court was unwilling to take the risk of trying the motions in the absence of the prisoner; tobe, possibly,afterward confronted by the claim that such a proceeding was totally illegal aDd unwarranted. He exercised proper discretion in so doing.

The court having determined that the trial should proceed, defendant moved for a continuance on the ground of the absence of witnesses. The continuance was refused, and defendant excepted.

In his bill he states that when the case was called up he answered he was not ready for trial, showing and stating that although his witnesses had been duly summoned and attachments had been issued for some of them on the 23d, they were still not present. That his grounds for continuance were stated in the motion for the same, which he annexed to the bill.

One of the grounds of complaint urged in the bill of exception was that the District Court, instead of requiring that the District Attorney should admit that all of the different witnesses named in his motion for a continuance would, if present, swear to the fact which defendant stated he expected to prove by them, had restricted the admission on the part of the District Attorney to the witnesses Hagan, Johnson, Duke and Foster.

The judge at the foot of the bill stated that “the three attachments mentioned in the motion were issued on the 23d, and had all [958]*958been returned on the 26th not found ’ — one was for a person who had never been found or served with a summons — one was for a person whom the sheriff returned, had permanently left the State, and the third for a person who had fled the State to avoid arrest under a warrant issued before he was summoned — that there was no reasonable probability of procuring the attendance of either of them . by a continuance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 So. 415, 49 La. Ann. 954, 1897 La. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-daniels-la-1897.