State v. Olson

86 N.W.2d 214, 249 Iowa 536
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 20, 1958
Docket49158
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 86 N.W.2d 214 (State v. Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Olson, 86 N.W.2d 214, 249 Iowa 536 (iowa 1958).

Opinion

Garfield, J.

Defendant was a member of the Crawford County Board of Supervisors from 1937 until March 1954, when he resigned following a heart attack. However he did not serve on the board from the fall of 1942 until December 1943 while a member of the armed forces. The three board members also acted as trustees of the county drainage districts.

On July 16, 1954, defendant was indicted for the crime of conspiracy with Leonard J. Hassett and L. J. Gibson, in violation of section 719.1, Code, 1950. Hassett and Gibson were county employees. Gibson died in January 1953. The indictment charges defendant “Did on or about the month of October, 1951, with fraudulent intent willingly and unlawfully conspire, combine and confederate with Leonard J. Hassett and L. J. Gibson to injure the property and funds owned by Boyer River Drainage District No. 1 of Crawford County, Iowa, and with a fraudulent intent to injure the rights of members of said drainage district * i;s ®, having an interest in said property and said funds of said drainage district, contrary to and in violation of section 719.1, Code of Iowa, 1950, * * * .”

On June 11, 1956, defendant pleaded not guilty. Place of trial was changed to Greene County where trial was had in September. During the nearly 23 months between return of the indictment and entry of the plea there were filed and ruled upon different motions to set aside the indictment, motions to require bills of particulars and to strike all or parts of the bills that were furnished, and an amended demurrer to the indictment. Testimony was taken for four days upon submission of the first *542 motion to set aside the indictment, apparently in an attempt to show bias and hostility toward defendant by the assistant county attorney and some of the grand jurors who returned the indictment. More than half of defendant’s brief is devoted to alleged errors that arose before the main trial commenced.

Briefly the State contends defendant conspired with Has-sett and Gibson to sell illegally to Boyer River Drainage District No. 1 a large quantity of jackstones at an excessive price for defendant’s personal enrichment. A jackstone is made of reinforced concrete, in three parts, each about five inches square and five to six feet long, fastened together near one end to form a tripod. They are installed in watercourses to retard erosion, apparently along the banks where the current is swift.

Large quantities of jackstones were made by Gibson under the name B & H Materials Co., purchased by the supervisors and paid for with drainage warrants. Defendant furnished Gibson substantial sums which were used in the business and received substantial amounts from proceeds of warrants issued in payment for the jackstones. The State claims defendant was a partner in this illegal enterprise. Defendant testifies the sums he advanced Gibson were merely loans made in a desire to assist him and the amounts defendant received were in payment of the loans.

I. Error is assigned in overruling defendant’s motion to set aside the indictment because it is said R. E. Franck, assistant county attorney, was an improper person present before the grand jury which returned the indictment. Code section 776.1, subsection 6 (all references are to the Code of 1954 unless otherwise indicated), gives as a ground for setting aside an indictment that someone other than the grand jurors was present before it during the investigation “except as required or permitted by law.”

On the county attorney’s application the district court made an order appointing Mr. Franck assistant county attorney with authority to appear before the grand jury for the purpose of assisting in such investigation as the state attorney general and the county, attorney may deem necessary and with authority to assist in such trial work as in the attorney general’s judgment may be necessary. Later that same day the court, apparently on

*543 its own motion, made an order expunging the previous One as premature in that no one was then charged with a felony. The county attorney then filed a second application reciting that John Doe, Richard Roe and certain other persons had been charged with conspiracy to defraud Crawford County in the court of a named justice of the peace and assistance was needed to properly present such matters to the grand jury and to try such cases as may result from the investigation. The court made a second order appointing Mr. Franck assistant county attorney with authority like that conferred by the first order, after reciting that certain persons had been charged with a felony.

Defendant argues Code section 341.7 conferred upon the court the only power it had to appoint an assistant to the county attorney. The section provides: “The county attorney may with the approval of a judge of the district court procure such assistants in the trial of a person charged with felony as he shall deem necessary * * (Emphasis added.) It is said a grand jury investigation is not a tidal and therefore the court was without power to authorize Mr. Franck to appear before the grand jury.

State v. Tyler, 122 Iowa 125, 127-130, 97 N.W. 983 (Ladd, J.), a conviction of first-degree murder, is conclusive against this claim of error. It holds the district court has inherent power, independent of what is now section 341.7, to appoint a reputable attorney to appear before the grand jury to assist the county attorney in an investigation. State v. Kovolosky, 92 Iowa 498, 501, 61 N.W. 223, is an earlier decision which also recognizes the power of the district court to appoint an assistant to the county attorney who, like that officer, may appear before the grand jury.

State v. Coleman, 226 Iowa 968, 972, 285 N.W. 269, disposes of a contention like that urged by defendant here by saying since the county attorney may appear before the grand jury an attorney appointed as his assistant by the court, under what is now section 341.7, may also do so.

State v. Jones, 306 Mo. 437, 268 S.W. 83, 85, recognizes the inherent power of the court, independent of statute, to ap *544 point a special prosecuting' attorney when the regular prosecutor is disqualified.

"We.have not overlooked, but do not discuss, defendant’s attempt to distinguish the Tyler and Coleman cases, supra. It will be impossible within the acceptable limits of an opinion to discuss all the many contentions able counsel have advanced.

Decisions which consider the effect of presence in the grand jury room of assistants to the prosecuting attorney are summarized in annotation 4 A. L. R.2d 392, 402, 403, 409, 410, and note 33 L. R. A., N. S., 568, 569-572.

II. There is no merit to defendant’s claim the indictment should have been set aside on the ground Mr. Franck failed to qualify as an assistant to the county attorney by posting bond and taking an oath of office and was therefore improperly before the grand jury. It is argued Franck was a public officer required by Code section 64.2 to give bond.

State v. Tyler, supra, 122 Iowa 125, 129, 97 N.W. 983, 985, approves the appearance before the grand jury of an assistant county attorney appointed bj^ the court although he takes no oath of office other than his oath as a practicing attorney and furnishes no bond.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.W.2d 214, 249 Iowa 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-olson-iowa-1958.