State v. Stimpson

62 A. 14, 78 Vt. 124, 1905 Vt. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 25, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 62 A. 14 (State v. Stimpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Stimpson, 62 A. 14, 78 Vt. 124, 1905 Vt. LEXIS 91 (Vt. 1905).

Opinion

RoweXu, C. J.

The case against Stimpson is an information for statutory rape, and the' one against Dee is an information for grand larceny. The principal question in the former, and the only question in the latter, is, whether section 1867 of the Vt. Sts., as amended by No. 46, Acts of 1898, and No. 64, Acts of 1904, is constitutional. It provides that state’s ’attorneys may prosecute by information all crimes except those punishable by death or by imprisonment in the state prison for life. It is claimed that said section is in contravention of the declaration in the Constitution that no person can “be justly deprived of his liberty, except by the laws of the land, or the’judgment of his peers.” This claim is based upon the contention that the words, “laws of the land,” as there used, require prosecutions for common law felonies to be by indictment, because, it is said, those words as used in Magna Charta, from which we bor[127]*127rowed them, required that, by settled judicial construction in England, at the time of the adoption of our Constitution, and that it is to be presumed that we took that construction with the words. As bearing on this question, it is important to consider whether that declaration in the Constitution has received a practical construction that has been acquiesced in for a considerable’ time; for if it has, that will be a valuable aid, to say the least, in determining the intent and meaning of those words as there used.

As early as 1779, state’s attorneys were provided for, and authorized to prosecute, manage,’ and plead in all matters proper, for and in behalf of the State. Slade’s State Papers, 331. By an act passed November 10, 1797, it was made the duty of state’s attorneys to file informations ex-officio in matters proper therefor. Rev. Sts. 1797, c. 64, § 1.

By an act passed February 27, '1787, it was provided that no person should be held to trial nor put to plead for a capital offence punishable with death, unless a bill of indictment was found against him therefor by a grand jury lawfully empanelled and sworn. Sts. of 1787, p. 82. This was only ten years after the adoption of the Constitution, and indicates that thus early the Legislature thought that without such an enactment one might be prosecuted for a capital offence, even, .otherwise than by indictment; for it is not to be presumed that the Legislature thought it was passing a useless act. This provision was carried into the Revision of 1797, p. 106, § 65. By an act “for the punishment of certain capital and other high crimes and misdemeanors/’ passed March 9, 1797, it was provided that no person should be tried for any offence under said act, until a bill of indictment was found against him by the grand jurors attending the Supreme Court of Judicature. Revision of 1797, p1. 173, [128]*128§ 36. This act did not include larceny, except horse stealing. On March 4, 1797, during the same session^ an act was passed “for the punishment of certain inferior crimes and misdemeanors.” Revision of 1797, p. 175. This act included larceny of money, goods, chattels, bonds, bills, notes, etc., regardless of value, and divers other offences, but did not provide how any of them should be prosecuted, and larceny is a felony at common law. These two statutes taken together point strongly to the conclusion that at that time it was not supposed that the Constitution required common law felonies to be prosecuted by indictment, but that it was for the Legislature to say what ones should be thus prosecuted, and what ones might be thus or otherwise prosecuted.

The act of March 9, 1797, was reenacted in 1818 with some additions, but not with the addition of larceny, and the act repealed. But the provision in respect of prosecuting by indictment was retained — Acts of 1818, p. 19, § 37 — and continued in force till the Revision of 1839, unless it was changed by c. 9, § 1, of the Acts of 1819, constituting state’s attorneys “informing officers,” which is doubtful, although it is said in State v. Magoon, 61 Vt. at p. 47, 17 Atl. 729, that prosecution by information of all crimes was authorized by statute from 1819 to 1839.

The act of March 4, 1797, was reenacted in 1821, with an increased penalty for larceny, but was still silent as to the mode of prosecution, and continued so until the Revision 'of 1839.

Since 1816 it has been the law that when a person is confined in jail on a complaint for a crime or misdemeanor, the Supreme Court may, on his application in writing, direct an information to be filed against him, whereon the Court may receive and record a plea of guilty and award sentence. [129]*129V. S. 1895. The act of October 30, 1828, provided that whenever a person was in actual confinement in jail by virtue of a complaint for an offence against said act “for the punishment of certain capital and other high crimes and misdemeanors,” the county court should have power and authority, on the application in writing of such person, to direct an information to be filed against him for the offence for which he stood charged, on the filing of which, it was made the duty of the court to proceed in the trial in the same way and manner as if an indictment had been presented by the grand jury. Acts of 1828, No. 3, § 3. And that has been the law ever since — V. S. 1897 — and has always been acted upon, except in homicide cases, probably, and without objection as far as we know. This, in effect, is a legislative construction that the Constitution does not require prosecution by indictment in any case, unless’ we say that the Legislature thought the requirement, if it existed, could be waived by the accused with its consent, which we can hardly do, for the law seems to be otherwise. That mere rights and privileges guaranteed by the Constitution can be waived, to1 some extent at least, is probably true. But it would seem that constitutional requirements as to' the mode and manner of instituting prosecutions involving the deprivation of life or liberty cannot be dispensed with by the Legislature, nor waived by the accused, even with the consent of the Legislature. Cooley Const. Lim., 6th ed.,4 214 et seq., and 390; Cancemi v. People, 18 N. Y. 128; Hopt v. Utah, 110 U. S. 574, 579.

In 1839 it was enacted that no person should be held to answer in any court for an alleged crime or offence, unless upon indictment by a grand jury, except in case of proceedings before a justice, and when a prosecution by information was expressly authorized by statute. Rev. Sts. c. 93, § 1. This [130]*130was but the act of March 9, 1797, as reenacted in 1818, with some additions. By c. 102, § 1, of the Revision of 1839, it was provided that state’s- attorneys might prosecute by information all crimes not capital and where the punishment was by imprisonment in the state prison for a term not exceeding seven years. Both of these statutes are still in force, with an enlargement' in the latter of the authority of the state’s attorney to prosecute by information all crimes not capital and not punishable in the state prison for life.

It was decided in State v. Leach, 77 Vt. 166, 59 Atl. 168, that statutory rape can be prosecuted by information. But the constitutionality of that mode of prosecuting was not raised nor considered, and the question has never been decided by this Court, nor raised in it but twice before; once in 1880, in State v. Haley, 52 Vt. 476, and again in 1888, in State v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 14, 78 Vt. 124, 1905 Vt. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stimpson-vt-1905.