State v. Mostad

291 N.W. 910, 70 N.D. 73, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 148
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1940
DocketFile No. Cr. 169.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 291 N.W. 910 (State v. Mostad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Mostad, 291 N.W. 910, 70 N.D. 73, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 148 (N.D. 1940).

Opinion

Burke, J.

An information charging the defendant with the commission of the crime of making a false statement in his certificate on an absent voter’s ballot envelope was filed in the county court of Ward county on November 28th, 1938. Defendant demurred to the information. The demurrer was sustained and the court ordered an amended information to be filed. The amended information charging the defendant with the commission of the same crime was filed December 3, 1938. Before pleading, the defendant moved to set aside the amended information upon the ground that he had had no preliminary examination upon the charge. The motion was denied and defendant pleaded not guilty. The case came on for trial before a jury on December 7, 1938, and the jury returned its verdict finding the defendant guilty as charged. Judgment of conviction was entered upon December 12, 1938. The defendant has appealed from the judgment.

There were eight assignments of error set forth in the specifications filed with the notice of appeal. Four of these we deem abandoned as they were not urged upon argument or in the brief. There remain for consideration specifications that the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to set aside the amended information; that it erred in permitting the testimony, given by the witness George at the preliminary hearing, to be read in evidence; that it erred in its instructions.to the jury and that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty.

Defendant’s motion to set aside the amended information is based solely upon the ground.that the defendant had had no preliminary examination-upon the charge set forth therein.

'There is no merit in the specification. After a preliminary examination the defendant was held to answer to the charge of which he has been- cpnvicted. . ,The criminal complaint which was presented to the justice of the peace, before whom the preliminary hearing was had, and *75 the original information filed in county court charged the same offense in identical language. The amended information contained the additional allegation that the defendant was: “A notary public, being an-officer authorized by law to administer an oath and possessing a seal”' at the time of the doing of the acts constituting the crime charged. In all' other respects its allegations are identical with those contained in the complaint. The additional allegation of fact contained in the amended information did not change the nature of the crime charged,’ nor did it alter in any respect the allegations of the particular acts of the defendant which it was charged constituted the crime. Whatever variance there may have been between the information and the complaint is well within, the limits we have heretofore approved. State v. Rozum, 8 N. D. 548, 80 N. W. 477; State v. O’Neal, 19 N. D. 426, 124 N. W. 68; State v. McKenzie, 67 N. D. 443, 273 N. W. 1. We think, it well to point out too, that the defendant was not entitled tó a preliminary hearing as a matter of right. This trial was had in county court. Section 8964, Compiled Laws of N. D. 1913, as amended by chapter 121, Laws of N. D. 1925 provides: “No preliminary examination shall be necessary before trial in criminal actions in county- court. . . .” The motion to set aside the information was propferly denied.’

At the trial, the court, over objection by defendant’s counsel, per-’ mitted the' testimony, given at the preliminary examination by the witness George, to be read in evidence. Defendant’s contention is that the foundation for the admission of this testimony was defective in that' it was not’ established that the witness George was absent from the state.’ Deputy Sheriff Lee testified that four or five days before the trial a subpoena for George was handed to him for service; that he attempted to locate the witness and was unable to do so; that he inquired of persons who knew the witness and also made inquiries at the place “where he had been when he was around town” and “learned he wasn’t here;”' that the persons of whom he 'inquired told himj “they thought he had gone.” While more positive proof of the absence of a witness from the' state, as foundation for the reception of the testimony given at a previous trial or preliminary examination might be desirable, it is unneces-’ sary for us to determine the sufficiency of the foundation here under attack. The information charged that the defendant wilfully and unlawfully made a .false statement in his certificate upon an absent’ *76 voter’s ballot envelope in that he falsely stated “that one Leonard George, for whom an application purporting to be from Reno, Nevada, for absent voter’s ballot was filed, exhibited an absent voter’s ballot to said defendant unmarked, and that Leonard George in the presence of the defendant, in the presence of no other person, and in such manner that said defendant could not see his vote, marked such ballots and enclosed and sealed the same in an absent voter’s ballot envelope; while in truth and in fact, Leonard George of Reno, Nevada, did not appear before said defendant, nor did Leonard George exhibit said ballots to the defendant, nor did Leonard George mark such ballots and enclose and seal the same in an absent voters’ ballot envelope.”

Section 997, Compiled Laws of N. D. 1913, sets forth the form of certificate which all absent voters’ ballot envelopes must bear. It is as follows:

“Subscribed and sworn to before me this .... day of.......... 19...; and I hereby certify that the affiant exhibited the enclosed ballots to be unmarked, that he then, in my presence and in the presence of no other person, and in such manner that I could not see his vote, marked such ballot, and enclosed and sealed the same in this envelope. That the affiant was not solicited or advised by me to vote for or against any candidate or measure.”

Section 1004, Compiled Laws of N. D. 1913, provides:

“. . . if any officer taking the affidavit provided for in § 997 shall make any false statement in his certificate thereto attached, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor. ...”

The testimony of the witness George is that the signatures appearing upon the absent voter’s ballot envelope and upon the application are not his; that he made no application for an absent voter’s ballot; that he did not appear before the defendant; that he did not mark or enclose and seal any absent voter’s ballots in an absent voter’s ballot-envelope in the presence of the' defendant. The defendant testified that George did not appear before him and vote and seal any ballots in an absent voter’s ballot envelope in his presence. The only possible variance in the testimony of the defendant and George is as to the genuineness of the signature to the voter’s certificate upon the absent voter’s ballot envelope. George testified he did not sign it. The defendant stated that he honestly believed that the signature appearing *77 thereon was George’s signature. This variance is immaterial. It was not charged in the information, and it was not necessary to charge therein, that George had not in fact executed the' voter’s certificate appearing on the envelope. The formalities which the statute requires to be followed in the voting of an absent voter’s ballot are to protect the integrity and secrecy of the ballot as well as its genuineness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
291 N.W. 910, 70 N.D. 73, 1940 N.D. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mostad-nd-1940.