State v. Raulie

290 P. 789, 35 N.M. 135
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1930
DocketNo. 3465.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 290 P. 789 (State v. Raulie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Raulie, 290 P. 789, 35 N.M. 135 (N.M. 1930).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

BICKLEY, C. J.

Appellant was indicted and put to trial upon a charge of rape. The jury returned a verdict of guilty. Sentence was pronounced, from which appeal is taken. Facts sufficient for an understanding of the points presented will appear as we proceed.

Appellant’s first contention is that the indictment is void because it was not returned by a lawful grand jury; said grand jury having been in law discharged prior to the finding of said' indictment. The facts are that a grand jury was impaneled, began and continued its work until February 7, 1929, whereupon it returned into open court some true bills and some no bills, and at the same time presented and filed its final report declaring that it had completed its labors, that nothing remained for said body to do or investigate, that all business for which it had been convened had been completed, and prayed its discharge; that said report was accepted, and filed in open court, but said grand jury was not by the court discharged; that the court then ordered that, notwithstanding the grand jury had completed the business before it, the court desired to and did retain said body for reconvention should anything further develop, and that the grand jury be recessed and not discharged, although the members thereof would be free to go and come, not leaving the county .without first informing the court and obtaining permission. The trial judge stated at the hearing on the plea in abatement that, while it was true that the report filed by the grand jury stated that the business had been finished, and prayed the discharge of the grand jury, it was also true that, at the time of said request for discharge, the assistant district attorney requested that they be not discharged, and that they did have some business yet to investigate. The learned trial judge, in commenting upon the statute invoked by appellant, section 78 — 215, 1929 Comp.:

“The grand jury, on the completion of the business before them, must be discharged by the court, but whether the business be complete or not, they are discharged by the final adjournment of the court, * * *”

said:

“I do not believe that the grand jury can arbitrarily determine that its business had been finished and file a report to that effect, and thereupon the court would have to discharge it. For instance, if the work was not finished and there were still cases pending to be investigated and the grand jury should be permitted to file a report stating they had finished their business, the court would have to discharge it. I really believe, gentlemen, that the determination as to when the business is finished must rest with the court, and it is his orders which must finally prevail.”

■ We approve the reasoning and decision of the trial judge.

Appellant next claims that the indictment is void because the several members of the grand jury were disqualified to act. He invokes section 3110, Code 1915 (section 78 — 203, 1929 Comp.), as follows:

“A challenge to one individual grand juror may be interposed for one or more of the following causes, only: * * * That a state of mind exists on his part in reference to the case, or either party, which satisfies the court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, that he cannot act impartially and without prejudice to the substantive rights of the party challenging.”

He relies upon two California cases construing a similar statute. One was Terrill v. Superior Court, 127 Cal. xviii 60 P. 38. (1899). The pertinent thing decided therein is thus stated in the syllabus:

“Under Pen. Code, § 1008, declaring that the judgment allowing a demurrer to an indictment is final, and a bar to another prosecution for the same offense, unless the court, being of the opinion that the objection may be avoided .in a new indictment, directs the case to be submitted to ‘another grand jury,’ where a demurrer to the indictment was sustained, but the indictment was resubmitted to the same grand jury, which found another indictment charging defendant with the same offense, founded on the same facts, such indictment was void.”

The court put a great deal of emphasis upon the fact that under the material circumstances the court might direct the case to be submitted to' “another grand jury,” and said this manifestly did not authorize a submission to the same grand jury that had found the original indictraent which had succumbed to the demurrer. We have no statute like the California statute relied upon in that case.

The other California case is People v. Hanstead, 135 Cal. 149, 67 P. 763 (1901) which quotes from the opinion in Terrill v. Superior Court, supra. This last-mentioned case was commented on by the Circuit Court of Appeals in Thompson v. United States, 202 F. 401, 404, 47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 206, arising in California. In that action a second indictment had been returned against the defendant in which he was accused of the identical crime in the first indictment. The contention was that this could not be legally done. The court said:

“Counsel for plaintiff in error cite three decisions — People v. Hanstead, 135 Cal. 149, 67 P. 763; People v. Bright, 157 Cal. 663, 109 P. 33; People v. Landis, 139 Cal. 426, 73 P. 153. The two cases last named are not in point, but People v. Hanstead holds distinctly in accordance with the contention of the plaintiff in error. That was a decision by a department of the Supreme Court and it runs directly counter to a former decision of that court -in banc, reported in People v. Northey, 77 Cal. 618, 19 P. 865, 20 P. 129 (8 Am. Crim. Rep. 338). The opinion in the Han-stead Case takes no note of the Northey Case, and the court would seem to have overlooked the decision in that case. The practice in the state of California, therefore, cannot be said to be settled in favor of the proposition for which the plaintiff in error contends. It is to be observed that all of the decisions of the Supreme Court of California above cited were rendered prior to the change in section 1008 of the Penal Code, which was made in 1905 (St. 1905, p. 773'). That section prior to the amendment provided that, if a demurrer were sustained to an indictment, it was a bar to another prosecution for the same offense, unless the court being of the opinion that the objection to which the demurrer was allowed might be avoided in a new indictment ‘directs the case to be submitted to another grand jury.’ The section as amended substitutes for the last clause the following: ‘Directs the case to be submitted to the same or another grand jury’— thereby declaring the law of the state to be that a grand jury which had once found an indictment against a defendant was not disqualified to find a second indictment against him upon the same facts, a wise provision of law, and we may well wonder why it should ever have been held otherwise, as no substantial reason is apparent why a grand jury after having once found an indictment which is discovered to be defective in form may not, upon the information which it has acquired, and with the same conviction, based upon that information, that the defendant should be brought to trial, present a second indictment for the same offense.”

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Related

State v. Gunthorpe
469 P.2d 160 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1970)
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178 P.2d 584 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1947)
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290 P. 792 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
290 P. 789, 35 N.M. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-raulie-nm-1930.