State v. Martin

24 So. 590, 50 La. Ann. 1157
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 19, 1898
DocketNo. 12,926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 So. 590 (State v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Martin, 24 So. 590, 50 La. Ann. 1157 (La. 1898).

Opinion

On Motion to Dismiss Appeal.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

The State is appellant from a decree making absolute a rule declaring a judgment of forfeiture of an appearance bond satisfied.

The appeal is met by a motion to dismiss on the ground that the case is a criminal proceeding in which no right of appeal exists in-.the State from the'ruling and judgment of the court a qua.

That the State has the constitutional right of appeal in certain-criminal proceedings, even though there be lacking express legislative enactment on the subject, is not an open question, and the exercise of this right is affirmed by jurisprudence.

See authorities cited in Knoblock’s Criminal Digest, p. 18. Also-[1158]*1158State vs. Dubois, 39 La. Ann. 676; State vs. Breeden, 47 La. Ann. 874.

Conceding that an appeal by the State will lie where an indictment is quashed, or a judgment is arrested, in felony cases, counsel for appellees denies that such right of appeal by the State ought to, or does, lie from a decision declaring a judgment of forfeiture of a bail bond satisfied.

In State vs. Williams, 37 La. Ann. 200, the sureties of defendant on his appearance bond appealed from a decree refusing to set aside a judgment of forfeiture, and the appeal was maintained.

In State vs. Burns, 38 La. Ann. 363, and State vs. Balize, Ib. 542, the bail bonds were forfeited and the sureties appealed. In the former ease the appeal was dismissed because sought and returned too late — not because the right of appeal was questioned or denied. In the latter case the appeal was maintained, and the judgment of forfeiture annulled and set aside.

In State vs. Martin, 49 La. An. 752 (the case of this same defendant on a former hearing), the appearance bond of accused having been forfeited and judgment entered up against the principal and sureties, a motion was made to set aside the judgment of forfeiture. Prom a decree denying the motion defendant appealed. No question of his right to do so was raised, and on the' merits the judgment appealed from was affirmed. See also 37 La. Ann. 62; 39 Ib. 939; 47 Ib. 363.

If persons charged with crime and their sureties on appearance bonds may appeal from final judgments forfeiting such bonds, or from final judgments refusing to set aside the forfeitures when made, surely the State may likewise appeal from adverse final judgments denying forfeiture, or setting aside forfeitures once made, or declaring judgments of forfeiture satisfied. The reasons for the one appeal are as strong and cogent as those for the other.

“But,” declares■ counsel for appellees, “ conceding the State an appeal in this case, how can the court say the judgment of the lower court, as presented, is error, without examining into all the facts upon which it is based, and all the circumstances surrounding its rendition? This your Honors will not do in any criminal case. You do not consider or review facts.”

True, it is not given this court to consider or review the facts of a criminal prosecution in so far as the same pertain to the question of [1159]*1159the guilt or innocence of the accused. But where an issue arises, like the one here presented, involving a question of law blended with facts, it is subject to our review. State vs. Nelson, 32 La. Ann. 845; State vs. Trivas, 32 La. Ann. 1086; State vs. Hyland, 36 La. Ann. 87; State vs. Seiley, 41 La. Ann. 143.

The appeal is from a ruling of the judge on the law as applicable to-a certain state of circumstances presented to him involving the right of release from forfeiture, vel non, of an appearance bond. No facts are involved on which a jury in a criminal prosecution had sat or could sit. The judgment discharging the sureties from the payment of the forfeited bond, decreeing the former judgment of forfeiture satisfied, can, in no sense, be assimilated to a verdict of a jury discharging an accused.

It is muc* more to be assimilated to a judgment in a civil proceeding annulling a former judgment for a moneyed demand.

The motion to dismiss is denied.

On the Merits.

Defendant was indicted in 1895 for receiving stolen goods, arrested and gave bond for his appearance. Nothing further was done in his case until the November term, 1896, when he was arraigned, pleaded not guilty and the case assigned for trial on a day fixed. On that day he failed to answer when called and his bond was duly forfeited. Four days later he was rearrested (being then in the court room) on a second capias that had issued. He gave a second appearance bond and was released from custody.

The day of his rearrest was the last, save one, of that term of ■ court. The adjournment of court the next day (Saturday) was necessitated by reason of the fact that a regular term of the same court in an adjoining parish would convene the following Monday.

At the time of his appearance in court and rearrest another criminal case was on trial, at the conclusion of which, within two hours thereafter, the jury was discharged for the term. It is shown that the witnesses for the prosecution in defendant’s ease were then absent and it was not practicable to try his ease before the final adjournment of the court. But, based upon his appearance and rearrest, and upon his then being in the custody of the court, he and his sureties filed motions to set aside the judgment of forfeiture of the first bond.

[1160]*1160This motion was tried the succeeding day (the last of the term) and overruled. Whereupon an order of appeal was taken to this court. The case was considered here in February, 1897, and a decree handed down affirming the judgment appealed from. 49 La. An. 752. The question there presented was (the appearance bond having been duly and legally forfeited-, the accused having been rearrested and in custody and offering for trial, but too late for trial then because the petit jury was about to be discharged, the court was about to adjourn for the term and the State’s witnesses were absent, one or more of them in an adjoining parish) whether the appellants were entitled to have the jndgment of forfeiture vacated. It was answered in the negative. It was held that the appearance of the-accused, under the coercive power of the court, will not suffice to set aside the judgment of forfeiture, even if the appearance be at the same term when the judgment was rendered, but too late for-trial at that term. It will be observed the issue there was, whether, under the circumstances presented, the judgment of forfeiture should be set aside. The issue here is, whether this judgment of forfeiture,, there maintained, should now be held satisfied.

What is to be considered is whether what took place afterward warrants the decree of the trial court sustaining the rule to declare satisfied the judgment of forfeiture affirmed by us.

The judgment of this court was rendered February 15, 1897. On February 18, three days later, defendant was tried in the parish of St. Helena on the indictment charging him with receiving stolen-goods, and acquitted.

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State v. Young
77 So. 772 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1918)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 So. 590, 50 La. Ann. 1157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-martin-la-1898.