State v. D'AUTREMONT

317 P.2d 932, 212 Or. 344, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 189
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 6, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 317 P.2d 932 (State v. D'AUTREMONT) 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. D'AUTREMONT, 317 P.2d 932, 212 Or. 344, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 189 (Or. 1957).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

These are consolidated appeals by the defendant, Hugh D’Autremont, in five cases from orders of the *346 circuit court denying motions to dismiss the indictments in such cases for failure of the state to bring them to trial within the time required by law.

On November 23, 1923, six indictments were returned against Roy D’Autremont, Ray D’Autremont, and Hugh D’Autremont, alias C. E. James. In four of these indictments the defendants were charged with first degree murder of the following persons, respectively, Charles E. Johnson, Marvin Seng, Elvyn Earl Dougherty, and Sidney Lloyd Bates; in one with stopping the operation of a railroad train with intent to steal therefrom; and in another with attempting to break and enter a railroad car in which United States mail, lawful money of the United States, and other personal property were kept with intent to steal therein. The date of the alleged crimes was October 11, 1923. They were all incident to a train robbery.

The several motions to dismiss were filed December 27, 1955. They state, and it is not disputed, that the defendant, Hugh D’Autremont, to whom we shall hereinafter refer as the prisoner, was arrested during January 1927 and was tried and convicted of first degree murder with recommendation of life imprisonment (in the case charging the murder of Charles E. Johnson), and that he has ever since been confined in the Oregon state penitentiary, but that he has not been brought to trial on any of the five remaining indictments. In a memorandum appended to each motion counsel for the prisoner states that the pending indictments “have been used to forestall the defendant’s receiving consideration for parole under the laws of Oregon” and that the trial of the prisoner “has not been postponed upon his application or by his consent.”

In response to these motions the district attorney filed a motion in each case for an order correcting and *347 supplying an omission in the record in order to show that the trials of the pending cases were postponed by agreement of the three defendants. This motion was supported by the following affidavit executed April 30, 1956.

“I, TENNYSON JEFFERSON, being first duly sworn on oath, do hereby depose and say: that in my capacity as a United States Post Office inspector I was present on June 23, 1927, when Roy D’Autremont, Ray D’Autremont and Hugh D’Autremont each made written confessions admitting the holdup of Southern Pacific train No. 13 on October 11,1923, and the murder of four trainmen and a railway postal clerk. I personally witnessed the signing of the confessions by the above named D’Autremont brothers. At the time the confessions were made, Hugh D’Autremont had already been convicted by a trial jury for the crime of first degree murder on one of the outstanding murder indictments. It was agreed by and between Mr. Charles Riddiford and myself representing the post office department and the above named Roy D’Autremont, Ray D’Autremont and Hugh D’Autremont at the time the confessions were given and signed that we would recommend to the court that Ray and Roy be permitted to enter pleas of guilty to second degree murder on one of the remaining outstanding murder indictments and be sentenced to life in the Oregon State Penitentiary and thus avoid being exposed and subjected to a possible death penalty on a trial of the outstanding murder indictments. At that time it was explained to Hugh, Ray and Roy D’Autremont that under ordinary circumstances a person sentenced to life imprisonment in the Oregon State Penitentiary was eligible for release consideration after about seven and one-half years. The three D’Autremont boys agreed at the time they signed their confessions that they were to spend the rest of their natural lives in the Oregon State Penitentiary and that the remaining outstanding indict *348 ments against them would not be prosecuted, but would be kept pending for the sole purpose of assuring that they and each of them would spend the rest of their natural lives in the penitentiary, and Ray D’Autremont, Roy D’Autremont and Hugh D’Autremont and each of them then and there agreed and consented that the indictments should remain standing, pending and unprosecuted in order to assure that they would spend the rest of their natural lives in the penitentiary and not thus be eligible for release consideration.
“That said agreement as herein stated was presented to the Circuit Court for Jackson County, Oregon, sitting in the person of the Hon. Circuit Judge C. M. Thomas, that said Circuit Court approved of said agreements and pursuant thereto, and upon the oral motion of Mr. Newton Chaney, the then district attorney for Jackson County, Oregon, the court permitted the defendants Ray D’Autremont and Roy D’Autremont to enter pleas of guilty to the lesser and included offense of second -degree murder, and thereafter sentenced them to life terms in the Oregon State Penitentiary.
“That I am advised that the agreement and court action hereinabove referred to are not reflected in the record of said Circuit Court, and that this affidavit is made for the purpose of setting forth the facts as they occurred and the action of the court in connection therewith.
“TENNYSON JEFFERSON”

A copy of the motion and supporting affidavit was served on the attorney for the prisoner on May 3,1956. The averments of the affidavit have never been controverted and no objections to entry of the nunc pro tunc order were filed by the prisoner. On June 9,1956, the court entered an order in each case which, after reciting the facts set forth in the Jefferson affidavit, and that the motion had been served on the attorney *349 for the prisoner and that no appearance or objection had been filed by him, concluded:

“# * * it is hereby
“CONSIDERED and ORDERED that the within entitled action and the trial thereon be, and it hereby is continued and postponed for an indefinite period of time upon the express consent and agreement of the above named defendants, and each of them. It is further
“CONSIDERED and ORDERED that this order be entered of record herein nunc pro tunc as of the 23rd day of June, 1927, for the purpose of correcting and supplying an omission in the record of the court’s action actually had at that time but omitted through inadvertence or mistake.”

The prisoner contends that the nunc pro tunc order was improperly entered because no such order was made by the court at the time that the pleas of guilty of Roy and Ray D’Autremont were received, and because the agreement described in the affidavit of Tennyson Jefferson is against public policy and void.

In our view, the decision does not depend upon the validity vel non of the nunc pro tunc order, but upon the question whether the prisoner has consented to the postponement of the trial of the pending cases.

In passing it should be observed that by the great weight of authority imprisonment on another charge does not constitute sufficient cause for failure to comply with statutory provisions prescribing the time within which a defendant indicted for crime must be brought to trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
317 P.2d 932, 212 Or. 344, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dautremont-or-1957.