State v. Pryharski

115 A.2d 529, 83 R.I. 274, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 11, 1955
StatusPublished

This text of 115 A.2d 529 (State v. Pryharski) 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. Pryharski, 115 A.2d 529, 83 R.I. 274, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 52 (R.I. 1955).

Opinion

Condon, J.

This is an indictment for embezzlement. After the defendant was found guilty and his motion for a new trial was denied he brought the case here by his bill of exceptions to such denial and to numerous other rulings made before and during the trial.

The indictment charges in substance that defendant did at Woonsocket in the county of Providence on divers dates between March 1, 1951 and March 31, 1951, embezzle lead of the value of $2,983.12 belonging to the city of Woonsocket, defendant at the time being an “officer, agent, clerk or servant” of said city and said property coming into his possession and under his care “by virtue of his being such officer, agent, clerk or servant.” The indictment was found by a grand jury attending the superior court sitting at Providence for the counties of Providence and Bristol. The grand jury consisted of nineteen jurors drawn from Providence county and two from Bristol county.

Before trial defendant filed sixteen pleas in abatement to the indictment on the ground that the grand jury was illegally constituted, first, because of the presence thereon of the jurors from Bristol; and secondly, because certain other jurors were not drawn in strict accordance with the statute making provision therefor. For the same reasons he filed a challenge to the array. He also filed a motion to quash the indictment which motion was based in part on such reasons. The trial justice overruled the challenge and the pleas in abatement, and denied the motion to quash.

The first plea in abatement raises the question of the validity of the grand jury because of the presence thereon of the jurors drawn from Bristol county. In support of the [277]*277plea defendant contends that a grand jury so constituted for Providence county is illegal and the indictment returned thereby is void. He argues that the only legal grand jury in this state is a common-law grand jury, and he cites as authority for this proposition Opinion to the Governor, 62 R. I. 200. Such a grand jury, he contends, consists of only the inhabitants of the county for which they are sworn to inquire, citing 2 Wharton’s Criminal Procedure (10th ed.), §1279, p. 1740.

The defendant further concedes that the instant grand jury was called to attend the superior court sitting at Providence for the counties of Providence and Bristol in accordance with general laws 1938, chapter 498, §2, as amended by public laws 1939, chap. 704. However, he argues that such statute does not combine those counties as one and that it should not be so construed. He does not challenge the constitutionality of the statute, although he does claim that a construction thereof which in effect obliterates the separate and distinct character of each county could very well raise a serious question of constitutionality.

We have carefully considered the above contentions and are of the opinion that we must take the statute as we find it. Its language seems to imply that both counties are to be treated as a unit. At least that is the way the superior court has construed and applied it for many years, apparently without objection from the bar until the instant case. In criminal matters it has treated the statute as authorizing the impaneling of one grand jury for both counties composed of jurors from both to inquire into crimes alleged to have been committed in either county. Since that construction of the statute was adopted the general assembly has met annually and has had occasion to amend the statute but it has never indicated that such construction was contrary to its intention. In the circumstances we are not at liberty now to adopt a different construction. Therefore, in the absence of any constitutional objection, the trial justice did [278]*278not err in following the statute as thus construed and applied and in overruling the first plea.

The other fifteen pleas in abatement are based on grounds relating to the manner in which the jury commissioner drew certain jurors for service on the grand jury and excluded others. The defendant contends that in performing this function of his office the commissioner did not act strictly in accordance with the authority conferred upon him by law. Assuming without deciding that this may be so, we are nevertheless of the opinion that there was such substantial compliance in the circumstances here as to preclude a holding that the indictment was void, especially since it does not appear that defendant was thereby deprived of the benefit of a fair and impartial grand jury. Hence, the trial justice did not err in overruling said pleas.

The challenge to the array being based upon the same grounds as the pleas in abatement, it was also properly overruled by the trial justice. Likewise the motion to quash the indictment in so far as it was based on those grounds was properly denied. All of defendant’s exceptions to those rulings are therefore overruled.

However, the motion to quash attacked the indictment on the following additional grounds, namely, that it was vague, indefinite, uncertain and duplicitous; that it did not sufficiently inform defendant of the nature and cause of the accusation against him; and that the allegations therein were insufficient to bring a case within the statute or to inform him of his status whether as official, agent, employee or servant in committing the alleged crime. The defendant’s principal contention in support of this motion is that the indictment as drawn does not inform him whether he is charged with possession of the embezzled property as an official, or an agent, or an employee, or a servant of the city of Woonsocket.

On the strength of State v. Colwell, 3 R. I. 284, he argues that an indictment which charges in the disjunctive is fatally [279]*279defective. In that case the offense itself was charged in the disjunctive and the court quite properly held the indictment was fatally defective because the defendant could not know therefrom which of the offenses he was charged with and would be required to defend. Here the offense is not charged in the disjunctive. It is the status or relation of defendant to the city of Woonsocket which is claimed to be in doubt because it is so charged. But we do not think that this works the same serious hardship upon defendant in preparing his defense as does a duplicitous charge of the offense. The defendant knows his own status as an employee of the city and if there was any uncertainty in his mind about it or if he felt that the manner of charging it unfairly hampered or burdened him in preparing his defense, he had a right under G. L. 1938, chap. 625, §3, clause 7, to demand a particularization of this part of the charge so as to make it more definite and certain. In view of such right, cases cited by defendant from other jurisdictions to sustain his contention are not in point and need not be discussed. In our opinion, therefore, the trial justice did not err in denying the motion to quash, and the exception to such denial is overruled.

During the trial defendant took numerous exceptions to rulings admitting or excluding evidence and he has prosecuted many of them in his bill of exceptions. However, he has briefed and argued only one, namely, exception numbered 10 to the trial justice’s refusal to allow witness Rose, the city clerk of Woonsocket, to answer the following question: “Q.

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Bluebook (online)
115 A.2d 529, 83 R.I. 274, 1955 R.I. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pryharski-ri-1955.