State v. Hume

78 A.2d 496, 146 Me. 129, 1951 Me. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 26, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 78 A.2d 496 (State v. Hume) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hume, 78 A.2d 496, 146 Me. 129, 1951 Me. LEXIS 6 (Me. 1951).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

This is an indictment for breaking, entering and larceny against Raymond C. Hume, alias Raymond Humes, alias Polack Humes. The respondent was found guilty by a Kennebec County jury and the case is now before the Law Court on exceptions and appeal.

The indictment was returned by the Grand Jury at the June Term, 1948, for violation of R. S., (1944), Chap. 119, Sec. 3 in breaking and entering in the nighttime the office at the Maine Central Railroad station at Winthrop and committing larceny therein. The respondent entered a plea of not guilty.

*131 At the February Term, 1949, the respondent was found guilty by verdict of the jury. Exceptions taken to the admission of certain improper testimony were sustained by the Law Court in State v. Hume, 145 Me. 5, 70 Atl. (2nd) 543, and the respondent was again tried at the February Term, 1950. The pending appeal and exceptions relate to this second trial.

Before the trial the respondent filed a motion for continuance on the ground that prejudicial statements had been published in local newspapers two weeks previously, which he claimed constituted an invasion of his right to a fair and impartial trial. This motion was denied by the presiding justice to which denial the respondent excepted.

On the morning of the second day of the trial, and during the trial, the respondent filed a motion for a mistrial on the ground that a certain article published on that day, appearing in local newspapers, was prejudicial to the rights of the respondent. Exceptions were taken to the denial of this motion.

During the course of the trial several exceptions were filed to the rulings of the presiding justice relative to the admissibility of certain testimony.

This case is here on exceptions to the refusal to grant a continuance, to the refusal to order a mistrial, and on exceptions to the admission of certain testimony, and also on appeal from the denial of a motion, made to the justice presiding, for a new trial.

FIRST AND SECOND EXCEPTIONS

The first two exceptions are directed to the refusal to grant continuance and the refusal to order a mistrial.

The article in the Kennebec Journal published February 16, 1950, quoted in the motion for continuance, was as follows :

*132 “HUME TO STAND TRIAL AGAIN AT CURRENT SESSION
Raymond C. Hume, Augusta, will stand trial for a two and a half year old charge during the present term of Superior Court, according to a statement made Wednesday by County Attorney James L. Reid. The 53 year old local restaurant proprietor was found guilty in February of last year by a Superior Court jury of a charge of breaking, entering and larceny into the Winthrop railroad depot in 1947. The County Attorney in a prepared statement stated he was asking for a new trial on the conclusion that ‘the question of the innocence or guilt of Hume is for the jury to determine.’ Hume had been granted a new trial by the Law Court after filing exceptions.
Hume was sentenced to serve 6 to 12 years in State Prison by Justice Arthur E. Sewall.
His attorney William C. Niehoff of Waterville, filed exceptions to certain legal aspects of the trial. Referred to the Law Court, the exceptions were upheld by Maine’s Chief Justice Harold H. Murchie.
He was then granted a new trial. He had been released under $20,000 bail pending the outcome of the filed exceptions which, when filed by the Law Court, could have resulted in a dismissal of the charge.
Reid’s full statement is as follows: ‘After reviewing the opinion of the Law Court and reviewing the evidence, and after consultation with the presiding justice (Justice Donald W. Webber), I have concluded that the question of the innocence or guilt of Raymond C. Hume is for the jury to determine and therefore I shall ask for a trial.
‘The decision of the Law Court hinged on a statutory amendment relating to the admissibility of certain evidence and does not appear to me to have significantly changed the jury aspect of the case.’
*133 The retrial was granted by the Law Court on the grounds that the court (Justice Sewall) erroneously admitted certain evidence with respect to the credibility of certain trial witnesses.”

The article as published on February 16, 1950. in the Waterville Morning Sentinel was, in substance, the same as in the foregoing article from the Kennebec Journal. The second article published during the trial on March 2, 1950 in both of the above named newspapers, for which mistrial was asked, rehearsed the fact that the case had been previously tried and the new trial granted, and in addition made a summary of the evidence introduced by the state during the first day of the trial.

There was no claim made that any of the newspaper articles contained any statement other than the truth, and the greater portions were matters of public knowledge and court record. They were not “inflammatory” and not intended to prejudice. The statement by the County Attorney and other statements therein, might or might not influence the decision of some juror if he read the accounts, depending of course on the mental capacity of the juror, his power of analysis, and his sense of fairness. It does not appear, however, that any one of the jurors ever saw any one of the newspaper articles published before or during the trial.

In ruling upon the motion for mistrial the presiding justice stated to counsel that the press reports were in accordance with the records and “within the domain of public knowledge.” The presiding justice also said that “opportunity was aiforded to counsel for the state and the respondent to further examine as to the impact of any prior readings of press reports pertaining to the case, or any other conversation or outside influence upon the mind of the jury. In each case the court is satisfied that the jury has retained an open mind in spite of prior publicity as to the course of this particular litigation. This court feels that at the most *134 the newspaper report now'in question can only refresh the recollection of the jury as to what was already part of the public knowledge at the time of the original trial and sentence.” • si

There is not the slightest indication in the record that any member of the panel was prejudiced by any newspaper account. In fact, as previously stated, it does not appear that any juror read, or had knowledge of, ahy newspaper article relating to this case. The fact that some newspaper account might prejudice some one who could be, or was, a juror, is not sufficient to show that a juror who was drawn was so prejudiced.

Continuances and mistrials are within the discretion of the presiding justice. Cunningham v. Long, 125 Me. 494, 497; Collins v. Dunbar, 131 Me. 337; Bank v. Shaw, 79 Me. 376; Graffam v. Cobb, 98 Me.

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Bluebook (online)
78 A.2d 496, 146 Me. 129, 1951 Me. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hume-me-1951.