State v. Ginther

77 P.2d 803, 53 Wyo. 17, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 4
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1938
Docket2039
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 77 P.2d 803 (State v. Ginther) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Ginther, 77 P.2d 803, 53 Wyo. 17, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 4 (Wyo. 1938).

Opinion

*21 Riner, Justice.

Phil L.- Ginther was charged under the first count in an information filed by the county and prosecuting *22 attorney of Albany County with the theft of a cow,' find in the second count, with receiving the animal knowing it to have been stolen. No value of the property taken was alleged in either count of the information. Ginther entered a plea of “not guilty” and the case proceeded to trial. April 7, 1937, the jury found him guilty on both counts. April 9th following, his counsel filed a motion in arrest of judgment, on the ground that the facts stated in either count of the information did not constitute an offense. The defendant’s motion aforesaid was sustained by an order of the trial court, Ginther was ordered to give bail, as provided in Section 33-1039, W. R. S., 1931, and the State was allowed an exception to this ruling. The State now seeks the reversal of this order by the direct appeal method of review proceedings. The cause was duly heard upon briefs and arguments submitted, but this court, upon examination of the record, suggested the question of the State’s right to institute a proceeding of this character, and accordingly requested that briefs be submitted upon this additional point which was neither originally considered, briefed nor argued by the parties. That has been done and the cause is now for disposition.

It seems generally held under the common law as administered in this country that the State may not bring a writ of error or take an appeal or have exceptions in a criminal case, unless the right thereto has been expressly granted by statute, though, there are some decisions which appear to hold that without statutory authority the prosecution may obtain a review of judgments favorable to the- defendant upon questions of law when no verdict of acquittal has been had. See 17 C. J. 39, Section 3310, and cases cited in notes.

Among the statutory modifications of the general rule above stated which are frequently to be met with *23 in the different state jurisdictions are statutes which expressly permit the state to secure the review of an order of a trial court sustaining a motion in arrest of judgment in a criminal case. We do not have such a statute, but we do have, and have had since territorial days, a peculiar and specialized procedure upon exceptions by the prosecuting attorney, whereby he may take them with reference to “any opinion or decision of the. court during prosecution of the cause.” They have been carried forward through various compilations of the law and are now incorporated in Wyoming Revised Statutes, 1931, as the four sections 33-909 to 33-912 inclusive. The text of these sections has been set out in full in the opinion in State ex rel. Gibson v. Cornwell, 14 Wyo. 526, 85 Pac. 977, subsequently referred to herein, and need not be again given space in this opinion. The method of procedure which they supply, the State in the matter at bar has not seen fit to follow, as already intimated.

In State v. Weathers, 13 Okla. C. R. 92, 162 Pac. 239, where, the statute expressly allowed the State an appeal in a criminal case from an order arresting judgment, quashing an information or indictment, and a question reserved by the State, it was held that the prosecution had no right to appeal from an order of the trial court granting a person convicted of crime a new trial, and the court remarked:

“In many jurisdictions the state has no right of appeal at all, and its right to appeal, where the right is granted, is based upon specific statutes, which statutes are not to be enlarged by construction.”

It was held in State v. Maddox, 154 La. 547, 97 So. 855, that as under the Constitution of Louisiana the Supreme Court had jurisdiction of all prosecutions for crimes where the penalty of death or imprisonment at hard labor might be inflicted, but had no jurisdiction of a prosecution for a less serious offense unless *24 a fine exceeding $300.00 or imprisonment for a term exceeding six months had been actually imposed, accordingly an appeal on behalf of the State would not lie from a judgment sustaining a motion in arrest of the judgment in a misdemeanor case and the State’s appeal from such a judgment would be dismissed on the court’s own motion, the contention on behalf of the motion in arrest of judgment being that the allegations of the indictment were not sufficient to accuse him of any offense. This result was reached, as indicated by the court, since: “The state cannot appeal from a judgment quashing an indictment for a misdemeanor, because the case is one in which no penalty has been actually imposed and in which the penalty of death or imprisonment at hard labor could not be imposed.”

Where two defendants were indicted for murder and tried separately, one was found guilty as charged and the verdict as to the other was voluntary manslaughter. Subsequently a motion was made to arrest the judgment against each defendant seperately. In the case of the defendant found guilty of the more serious offense, it was ordered that the verdict be set aside, and in the case of the other defendant the judgment was ordered arrested. The Solicitor-General excepted in behalf of the State. Dismissing the writ of error in both cases on the ground that such a writ in behalf of the State against a defendant in a criminal case could not be brought, the court in State of Georgia v. Johnson et al., 61 Ga. 640, said:

“The 4251stseetion of the Code declares, that ‘either party in any civil cause, and the defendant in any criminal proceeding in the superior courts of this state, may except to any sentence, judgment, or decision, or decree of such court, or of the judge thereof in any matter heard at chambers.’ ”

*25 Where the law provided that the Commonwealth might prosecute a writ of error from a decision arresting a judgment of conviction based upon invalidity or construction of the statute upon which such indictment or information was founded, in People v. Woodward, 215 Mich. 267, 183 N. W. 901, it was held that this statutory authority did not permit a writ of error by the prosecution from a decision sustaining a motion in arrest of judgment on the ground that defendant’s conviction of possessing intoxicating liquors was obtained through evidence secured by an unlawful search and seizure, and the court said:

“It is obvious from the provisions of the act that the Legislature contemplated the issuance of a writ of error in behalf of the people only when the indictment was attacked upon the ground of the invalidity or construction of the. statute upon which the indictment was based. In the present case the indictment was not attacked, and the validity of the statute was in no way questioned. The ground upon which the judgment of conviction was attacked was the fact that the conviction was brought about by evidence illegally obtained.”

See also State v. Bollinger, 69 Mo. 577.

In State v. Arnold, 144 Ind. 651, 42 N . E. 1095, the court, referring to a statute quite similar to that considered in State v. Weathers, supra, said:

“These statutes, it is urged, deny the right of the State to.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P.2d 803, 53 Wyo. 17, 1938 Wyo. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ginther-wyo-1938.