State v. Helm

209 P.2d 187, 66 Nev. 286, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 68
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1949
Docket3530
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 209 P.2d 187 (State v. Helm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada 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. Helm, 209 P.2d 187, 66 Nev. 286, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 68 (Neb. 1949).

Opinions

OPINION

By the Court,

Hatton, District Judge:

Clifford Duane Helm, the defendant below, is the appellant here. He will be referred to herein as the defendant.

The defendant was charged with the murder of one Frank Ferroni, Jr., also known as John Beasley, in an Information filed by the district attorney of Clark County, Nevada, on March 27, 1947, to which he, on April 16, 1947, entered his plea of not guilty. On June 2, 1947, the impaneling of the jury began, the information was read to the prospective jurors, and the impaneling proceeded to the point where the state and the defendant entered upon the exercising of their peremptory challenges. The defendant passed his third, fourth, and fifth peremptory challenges. Then, with the twelve jurors in the box remaining the same as upon the passing of his fifth peremptory challenge, his counsel asked *290 leave to exercise his sixth peremptory challenge, by challenging one Robinson, which request the trial judge refused to grant, and to which ruling the defendant excepted. The jury were then sworn to try the cause, the Information was read by the clerk, and. the plea stated, and the district attorney made his opening statement. The court then recessed to the following day, when the trial was resumed. Immediately upon the resumption of the trial, the trial judge stated his opinion that he had erred on the previous day in refusing to allow the defendant to exercise his six peremptory challenge, and stated that he would declare a mistrial unless the parties accepted the jury. Defendant’s counsel stated that he would stand on the record, and was unwilling to accept the jury except upon the conditions as shown by the record. He neither specifically consented nor objected to the discharge of the jury. The court then declared a mistrial, and dismissed the jury. The trial of the case was reset for September 15, 1947. On that date, the defendant applied for leave to withdraw his plea of not guilty and substitute a plea, in writing, of once in jeopardy and asking for his discharge, which application was refused by the court. The defendant, however, was allowed to file his said plea of once in jeopardy. The trial was then proceeded with, and resulted in a verdict of guilty of murder of the first degree, the punishment being fixed at life imprisonment.

The first alleged error assigned and discussed in the briefs is that the trial court erred in denying the defendant’s plea of once in jeopardy.

Upon the authority of the case of State v. Pritchard, 15 Nev. 74, it is clear that the court erred in refusing to allow the defendant to exercise his sixth peremptory challenge, and that a verdict of guilty upon a trial before the jurors then in the jury box would have been set aside on appeal to this court. The question arises as to whether or not the defendant' had already suffered a prior jeopardy when he was brought to trial on September 15, 1947.

*291 The subject of prior jeopardy was before this court in the case of Ex parte Maxwell, 11 Nev. 428. In that case the jury had failed to agree on a verdict, and were dismissed without a determination by the court, -on the record, of the grounds for such dismissal, and it was held that, in the absence of such determination, prior jeopardy was shown. In the opinion in the Maxwell case the following statements appear:

“Although there still exists some conflict and confusion in the opinion of judges upon this question, the rule now seems to be pretty well settled in the American courts that .whenever the accused has been placed upon trial, upon a valid indictment, before a competent court, and a jury duly impaneled, sworn and charged with the case, he has then reached the jeopardy, from the repetition of which this constitutional provision protects him.
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“Bishop, in his treatise on criminal law, after an elaborate review of the authorities and a discussion of the whole subject says: ‘The better view of this whole question may be stated as follows: Whenever a trial has commenced whether for misdemeanor or felony [and] the judge discovers any imperfection which will render a verdict against the defendant either void or voidable by him, he may stop the trial, and what has been done will be no impediment in the way of any future proceedings.’
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“In other words, when the record shows an actual jeopardy to have taken place against the defendant, he is protected thereby from further peril for the alleged offense. But where the record shows also matters disproving the peril, it does not show the peril, whatever else it shows, and therefore it does not protect him.”

In the later edition of the work referred to, Bishop’s New Criminal Law, Vol. 1, p. 622, the author adds: “Then, the prima facie jeopardy appearing of record, matter nullifying it will also appear, and the defendant will be properly held for further proceedings.”

*292 At page 623 the author states: “If, after the trial has commenced, a juror is'discovered to have been insufficiently sworn, or to be insane, or not of the panel, or from any other cause incompetent, he may be discharged or the error corrected otherwise without entitling the prisoner to go free. Some state the rule to be that anything discovered in a juror showing him not to be a proper one to sit in the case will work this result. But the better form of the doctrine is that the matter must be such as the defendant can make ground for a new trial if the verdict is against him.”

It is shown, on the record in this case, that the jury above referred to was never duly, or legally, impaneled. We therefore conclude that the defendant’s abortive trial before that jury was not attended with jeopardy or peril of a legal conviction, and we must decide that the trial court did not err in denying the defendant’s plea of once in jeopardy.

The defendant contends that the first jury was discharged without such necessity as the law recognized as legally sufficient, and that hence its discharge was equivalent to his acquittal. The authorities quoted from above support the view that there was presented to the trial court, in the present case, a necessity for the discharge of the jury, which necessity was both manifest and overruling. The American cases hold generally that the determining of such necessity lies in the discretion of the trial court upon a consideration of all of the circumstances of the case. 22 C.J.S., Criminal Law, sec. 258, page 394. In the present case, the court could either have proceeded with the trial knowing that the judicial machinery was legally defective and that a verdict of guilty would be set aside by this court on appeal, or the trial judge could declare a mistrial and begin anew. We regard it as clear that the ends of public justice demanded the latter course.

In the case of Thompson v. U. S., 1894, 155 U.S. 271, 15 S.Ct. 73, 74, 39 L.Ed. 146, the supreme court of the *293 United States considered and passed upon a case similar to the one presented here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 P.2d 187, 66 Nev. 286, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-helm-nev-1949.