State v. Foss

104 So. 211, 158 La. 471, 1925 La. LEXIS 2079
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1925
DocketNo. 27086.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 104 So. 211 (State v. Foss) 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. Foss, 104 So. 211, 158 La. 471, 1925 La. LEXIS 2079 (La. 1925).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The accused was indicted, tried, and convicted for breaking and entering a dwelling house in the night season and stealing a lot of jewelry valued at $130,-000.

From a sentence of not less than seven nor more than ten years in the penitentiary the accused prosecutes this appeal.

The first bill of exception, in the order in which the bills appear in the record, was reserved to the overruling of a motion in arrest of judgment.

The motion alleges that evidence was taken on Sunday; that the case was argued for the state and the accused on Sunday; that the court charged the jury on Sunday; and that the jury deliberated and returned its verdict, which was recorded on Sunday; that, Sunday being a legal holiday and dies non juridicus, all the proceedings had after 12 o’clock midnight Saturday were null and void and without legal effect.

It appears from the minutes of the court that the case was taken up for trial on Friday, January 9, and that the jury was finally completed and sworn to try the case on the following day. The taking of evidence was then begun, and was concluded on Saturday night at 11:20. That the argument of counsel ended at 12:25, when the judge delivered his charge to the jury, and the ver *473 diet of the jury was returned and recorded at 2 :00 a. m. Sunday.

The per curiam of the judge shows that when the evidence was concluded, at 11:20, the counsel for the defendant in open court approached the bench and requested the court to set back the hand of the clock, which the court declined to do.

The defendant’s counsel who is not counsel in this appeal, then stated to the court that he was very anxious to continue with the trial of the case, whereupon the district attorney objected for the reason that, if the trial proceeded and resulted in a conviction of the accused, the continuance of the proceedings on Sunday might be urged as a ground for a new trial. The defendant’s counsel then stated that he would do nothing of the sort, and gave his word of honor that, if the case was allowed to proceed, no advantage would be taken of the fact that some of the proceedings had been held on Sunday. The case was then proceeded with and concluded, as already stated.

Act No. 6 of 1904 provides that whenever the impaneling of a jury or the taking of evidence on the trial of any case shall have been begun, but not concluded, at the time at which there shall intervene any legal holiday or legal half holiday, it shall be lawful for the presiding judge and within his discretion to order said trial to be proceeded with upon said legal holiday, if not Sunday or Christmas Day, and all proceedings thereafter had in the trial of said case shall have the same force and effect as though had on a day not a legal holiday.

There can be no mistake as to the purpose of the statute. The language is plain and unambiguous. It confers upon the judge the authority and discretion to proceed on a holiday other than Sunday or Christmas Day with the trial of a ease already begun and in progress when the holiday intervenes, and withholds from him the discretion and the authority to continue the trial of a ease on either of the excepted days.

The pivotal question to be decided, therefore, is whether an accused party who not only makes no objection to proceeding with the trial of his case, but expressly consents thereto and asks the court to proceed with the trial, promising the court to take no advantage of the fact that such trial was proceeded with on Sunday, can after conviction be heard to urge the nullity of the proceedings and the verdict rendered against him.

It is argued that, Sunday being a dies non juridicus, so made by the statute, the court was incompetent and without jurisdiction and authority to proceed with the case on that day, even with the consent of the accused, under the doctrine that the consent cannot confer jurisdiction ratione materia:.

In some jurisdictions there is, a recognized distinction between Sunday and a purely statutory holiday. That the Sabbath is a day of rest and worship generally recognized and observed as such throughout the Christian world, whereas statutory holidays are not considered as holy and sacramental as the Sabbath, especially with respect to judicial proceedings. But the lawmaking ppwer of this state has never attempted to make such a distinction until the passage of the act of 1904, nor has jurisprudence done so. Prior to that statute, every general law designating certain days as legal holidays has included Sunday, and whatever acts (judicial) that were permitted or prohibited on Sunday were likewise permitted or prohibited on the other holidays named. All the holidays, including Sunday, were declared and considered to be “days of public rest and legal holidays and half holidays in this state.”

So that, at least up to the statute of 1904, whatever judicial act that could be performed on a statutory holiday could likewise be performed on Sunday. In the case *475 of State v. Varnado, 126 La. 743, 52 So. 1010, we said:

“It is settled beyond controversy that the receiving and recordation of a verdict on a Sunday or other dies non juridicus is permissible.”

See, also, State v. Atkinson, 104 La. 570, 29 So. 279, and authorities there cited.

In the case of State v. Duncan, 118 La. 702, 43 So. 283, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 791, 11 Ann. Cas. 557, the defendant was prosecuted for murder and was convicted of manslaughter. He was tried on an election day which had been declared to be a legal holiday. He made no objection, but went to trial, and after conviction sought to set aside the verdict in a motion in arrest of judgment. This court on appeal said: •

“An accused has no right to stand by and suffer proceedings to take place on a ‘statutory holiday,’ and after verdict, in a motion to quash, ask to have the proceedings reversed on the ground that it was a holiday.”
“The objection should not have been postponed until after verdict, nor urged for the first time in motion in arrest.”

In the course of the opinion it was further said:

“Moreover, the proceedings on a statutory legal holiday are not necessarily null. They may be held on that day by consent. Besides, an accused may be concluded by his silence, if he chooses to remain silent when he is represented by counsel amply able to protect his rights.”

The opinion in the above case was handed down in February, 1907, and, while the act of 1904 was not mentioned in the opinion, it did not escape the attention .of the court, for it is quoted in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Provosty.

If, as held in the Duncan Case, an accused who remains silent and proceeds to trial on a holiday, cannot after verdict be heard to urge the illegality of the proceedings, there is no good reason, it would seem, why the same rule should not apply where, as in this case, the conclusion of the trial on Sunday was at the express instance and solicitation of the accused.

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Bluebook (online)
104 So. 211, 158 La. 471, 1925 La. LEXIS 2079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-foss-la-1925.