State v. Kieon

152 A.2d 531, 89 R.I. 320, 1959 R.I. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 30, 1959
DocketEx. No. 9946
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 152 A.2d 531 (State v. Kieon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kieon, 152 A.2d 531, 89 R.I. 320, 1959 R.I. LEXIS 80 (R.I. 1959).

Opinion

*321 Roberts, J.

This is an indictment charging Stanley M. Kieon and Walter A. Sito with robbery. After the demurrer of the state to certain pleas in abatement was sustained, the defendants were tried before a jury in the superior court and were found guilty. The case is here on each defendant’s bill of exceptions. Hereinafter, unless otherwise specified, the term “defendants’ exceptions” or terms of a similar tenor will refer to the exceptions of each defendant, singly and collectively.

It appears from evidence adduced by the state that on the evening of April 19, 1957 Thomas Bannister, who was employed as a manager of a market located on Reservoir avenue in the city of Cranston, parked his car near a restaurant on Park avenue in that city for the purpose of making a delivery of merchandise. Bannister testified that as he left his car two men holding their hands in their coat pockets approached him. He identified them as the defendants. According to Bannister, they took his keys and forced him to re-enter his car and lie on the floor at the rear seat. He was then compelled by them to identify which of his beys opened the lock of the door and to disclose to them the combination of the market safe. The defendants then drove the car back to the market.

Upon arriving at the market one of the defendants entered the store but returned after a few minutes to report *322 that he could not open the safe. The two defendants then took Bannister into. the store with them and compelled him to open the safe. One of the defendants took the money which was in the safe while the other took Bannister’s eyeglasses which he did not return to him. Upon leaving the store they took Bannister into an adjoining field where they ’bound and gagged him. A short time later Bannister succeeded in freeing himself and went to' a nearby house where a telephone call was made to the police.

About the same time a Cranston police officer was making a routine check of the premises at the rear of the market. While so doing he came upon the defendant Kieon, who was crouching behind Bannister’s car. The patrolman took Kieon into' custody and sometime later Sito was arrested in Pawtucket.

After their arraignment defendants filed certain pleas in abatement wherein they prayed that the indictment be quashed. In one of these pleas they contended that the grand jury was illegally constituted because the list from which it was drawn did not contain the names of certain persons qualified for jury duty who should have been included upon said list. The demurrer of the state to this plea was sustained, and defendants’ first exception was taken to this ruling of the trial justice.

The members of the grand jury who returned the instant indictment were drawn from a list of grand jurors prepared between April 15 and May 1, 1956 and constituted what is hereinafter referred to as the 1956 list. The list had been prepared in accordance with the provisions of public laws 1950, chapter 2450.

This chapter provided, among other things, that certain classes of persons were automatically exempted from jury duty and that other specified classes were given the right to be exempt from jury duty by making a claim in writing for such exemption. It is not disputed that a number of persons had claimed optional exemption from jury duty as *323 provided in the statute and that the names of persons so exempted did not appear on the 1956 list.

■ On May 6, 1957 the legislature amended the law relating to the selection of jurors by enacting P. L. 1957, chap. 124. Under this statute several classes of persons who, under the terms of the prior statute, had been entitled to claim exemption from jury duty were deprived of that right. It is clear that after the enactment of this amendatory legislation more persons were subject to compulsory jury duty than were subject to such duty under the law as it stood when the 1956 list was prepared.

On June 3, 1957 the grand jury which returned the instant indictment was drawn from the 1956 list. It is not disputed that no names had been added to that list of 1956 as a result of the passage of P. L. 1957, chap. 124.

The defendants contend that they were entitled to have the grand jury drawn from a list of potential grand jurors constituted in accordance with the law in effect at the time, that is, chap. 124. They argue that persons who had been exempted at their own request when drawn from the 1956 list should have been placed on the list upon the passage of chap. 124, which deprived such persons of their right to exemption. The gist of the argument is that at the time the grand jury was drawn the defendants were entitled to have the list from which it was drawn contain the names of those who had claimed exemption from jury duty when the list was being prepared in 1956.

The defendants contend that the position which they thus take is sustained by the decision of this court in the case of State v. Muldoon, 67 R. I. 80. In that case several defendants had .been indicted for conspiracy in indictments returned on February 12, 1940 by a grand jury drawn on September 18, 1939. The law governing the drawing of grand jurors had been amended so as to require that those who would be selected to serve as grand jurors from the cities of the state were to be drawn and summoned for duty *324 by a jury commissioner. Prior to that amendment those selected from the cities as well as the towns had been drawn by the clerk of the superior court for the county in which they resided. It was not disputed in that case that eleven members of the grand jury which returned the indictment had been drawn from the cities of the state by the clerk of the superior court.

We are of the opinion that there is a substantial distinction between State v. Muldoon and the instant case. In that case the court stated at page 88: “* * * the legislature clearly intended to provide an entirely new system for the drawing and qualifying of jurors for service in the courts of this state.” It was legislation mandatory in character, and the legislature in enacting it intended to discard the existing system and to substitute therefor an entirely different one for drawing jurors from the cities. It is equally clear that the jury commissioner did not comply with the mandate of the statute, although he was in office for some sixty days prior to the time when the jury in question was impaneled. As a result of the jury commissioner’s noncompliance with the statute, those jurors drawn from the cities were illegally on the panel and it is clear that they were not qualified to serve on the jury at the time they were sworn.

The intent of the legislature in the instant case was only to withdraw from certain classes of persons summoned for jury duty the optional right to claim exemption from such service. They did not intend to discard the system then in effect for the drawing of grand jurors and to substitute therefor an entirely new system. The preparation of new lists was not contemplated. In such circumstances it is clear that all of those who served on the panel which returned the instant indictment were qualified to serve at the time they were sworn.

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Related

State v. Scott
330 A.2d 66 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1974)
State v. Mastracchio
312 A.2d 190 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1973)
State v. Patriarca
308 A.2d 300 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1973)
State v. Kieon
175 A.2d 284 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 A.2d 531, 89 R.I. 320, 1959 R.I. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kieon-ri-1959.