State v. Lane

211 P.2d 821, 69 Ariz. 236, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 111
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1949
DocketNo. 997.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 211 P.2d 821 (State v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona 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. Lane, 211 P.2d 821, 69 Ariz. 236, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 111 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

PHELPS, Justice.

Appellant Charles E. Lane, Jr., hereinafter referred to as defendant was charged by an information filed in the Maricopa County Superior Court with the murder of one Mary Alice Lane, in said county and state on or about February 10, 1948, to which defendant entered a plea of not guilty. The cause regularly came on for trial and at the close thereof a verdict of murder of the first degree was returned by the jury fixing the punishment at life imprisonment in the state penitentiary at Florence.

Thereafter upon the denial of a motion for a new trial and motion in arrest of judgment the court pronounced its judgment and sentence in conformity with the verdict of the jury.

From said judgment and orders denying defendant’s said motions, defendant has appealed to this court.

We do not deem a statement of facts necessary except as they may be developed in discussing the points raised on appeal.

Defendant has presented six assignments of error which may be logically grouped into two divisions raising two primary questions of law for our consideration.

Assignments 1 and 2 are directed to what defendant terms a fatally defective information and the court’s action in permitting the county attorney to amend said information after the jury had been impaneled and sworn to try the case. Assignments 3, 4, 5 and 6 challenge the admissibility of the testimony of the father of defendant offered by the state in rebuttal and the alleged error of the court in permitting the state to cross-examine and to impeach said witness.

It appears that after the jury had been impaneled and sworn when the clerk *239 was reading the information in the case, it was discovered for the first time that the information had not been signed by the county attorney and the court upon the request of the state permitted the county attorney to sign said information. The defendant vigorously objected to such amendment and moved for a mistrial upon the ground that the information did not conform or comply with the laws of the state of Arizona as set forth in section 44-233 of the Code, presumably meaning section 44-705, and that in fact it was no information at all because it was not signed. This motion was promptly denied by the court.

The defendant contends that the court was without power to permit said amendment and that in allowing the amendment to be made the constitutional rights of the defendant were violated and that the court must presume that the defendant was prejudiced thereby. Defendant relies upon sections 24 and 30, article 2 of the constitution of Arizona which provide in substance that no person shall be prosecuted in any court of record for a felony or misdemeanor otherwise than by information or indictment and that defendant has a right to have a copy thereof. He contends that an unsigned information is a mere scrap of paper and could not be given vitality by amendment at that stage of the proceedings. It is the further contention of the defendant that subsection (2) of section 44-705, A.C.A. 1939, upon which the court relied as authority for its action, violates the above constitutional provisions and that said section is therefore void. Section 44-705, supra, provides:

“Subscription and verification of information. — (1) All informations shall be subscribed by the county attorney. Except in cases where the defendant has been held to answer in a preliminary examination, the information shall be verified by the oath of the county attorney or that of the complainant or of some other person. When the information is verified by the county attorney, it shall ‘be sufficient if the verification is upon information and belief.

“(2) No objection to an information on the ground that it was not subscribed or verified, as above provided, shall be made after'moving to quash or pleading to the merits.”

We cannot agree with the defendant’s interpretation of the law in question. These provisions must be considered and interpreted in connection with and in the light of section 22, article 6 of the state constitution which provides: “(Criminal procedure.) — The pleadings and proceedings in criminal causes in the courts shall be as provided by law. No cause shall be reversed for techincal error in pleading or proceedings when upon the whole case it shall appear that substantial justice has been done.”

Defendant calls the court’s attention to this provision of the constitution and refers *240 to it as having been denominated by this court as the “substantial justice” clause of the constitution. It is more than that, however. It is that provision of the constitution which gave to the legislature the power to declare the requisites of a pleading and to prescribe the proceedings in criminal cases. Section 44-705, supra, in no way invades the field of substantive law but is purely a rule of procedure promulgated by the supreme court pursuant to the provisions of chapter 8, section 1, Session Laws of 1939, section 19-202, A.C.A. 1939. The constitution, while it says that no person shall be prosecuted criminally in a court of record for a felony or misdemean- or otherwise than by information or indictment, does not require that an information be signed by any person and it is only by virtue of the provisions of section 44-705, supra, that informations must be subscribed by the county attorney. If that section is repugnant to the constitutional provisions relied upon by defendant and is therefore void then defendant has no ground at all which to predicate assignments of error 1 and 2 for the reason that there is no requirement in the law or in the rules of procedure that an information shall be signed by the county attorney except in section 44-705, supra. If the court under the authority granted it by the legislature had authority to require the county attorney to sign the information or if it had authority to do so by reason of its inherent powers to make rules necessary to facilitate the administration of justice as we have declared it to possess in a number of cases including Burney v. Lee, 59 Ariz. 360, 129 P.2d 308, it had authority to provide a limitation within which the defendant may take advantage of his failure to sign it. The legislature was clearly vested with power under the provisions of section 22, article 6, of the constitution to enact section 44-705, supra, if it saw fit to exercise that right and it had the right if it deemed it wise to do so, to withdraw from the field and leave the matter of rule making exclusively to the supreme court which it did under the provisions of chapter 8, section 1, Session Laws of 1939, section 19-202, supra. This court in the case of Burney v. Lee, supra, held that the enactment of chapter 8, supra, was a valid exercise of legislative powers under the constitution. This being true it is immaterial whether section 44-705 was promulgated by this court in the exercise of its inherent power or by virtue of legislative withdrawal from the rule-making field. Its promulgation in either event was a valid exercise of the power of the court and the rule is therefore constitutional. This being true, it follows that there is no merit to defendant's assignments of error 1 and 2.

The next question raised falling in group 2 of the assignments is that the court erred in admitting testimony of ■Charles E.

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Bluebook (online)
211 P.2d 821, 69 Ariz. 236, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lane-ariz-1949.