State v. Tucker

224 N.W. 878, 58 N.D. 82, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 184
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 878 (State v. Tucker) 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. Tucker, 224 N.W. 878, 58 N.D. 82, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 184 (N.D. 1929).

Opinion

BiRdzbll, J.

Francis Tucker was tried in the district court of LaMoure county for the murder of one ILans O. Bjone and was convicted. He appeals to this court from the judgment of conviction and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

Hans C. Bjone during his lifetime was the cashier of the Farmers & Merchants Bank of Yerona. He was in sole charge of the bank except for such supervision as was exercised by two uncles, who lived in the vicinity of Yerona and owned the controlling interest in the bank. He was a bachelor and had a living room in the bank building where he slept and sometimes cooked for himself. On the morning of March 1, 1927, the bank did not open as usual. After this fact had been noted by several, one of the townsmen upon trying the front door discovered that it was not locked. Thereupon he forced the door open and found that one nail had been driven in the frame and one below the door into the threshhold to hold it shut. After an examination of the banking room and of the living room it was ascertained that the vault door was locked. This was soon opened by a former employee of the bank, who remembered the combination, and just inside the vault was found the body of Hans C. Bjone. There were five bullet wounds in the head. Hpon a later examination it developed that the bullets were not all of the same caliber. Three bullets were later extracted from the head of the deceased. Two were .22 caliber and one .25 caliber. In chocking up the cash assets of the bank it was discovered that some $3,600 had been taken between February 28th and March 1st. The back door of the building was equipped with a Yale lock which locked automatically when the door was closed. There was *86 a storm door outside tbe rear door, wbicb was kept closed by a book and fastened from tbe inside. Tbis storm door was open on tbe morning of March 1st. These main facts wbicb were patent upon a casual examination indicated that some one actuated by tbe motive of robbery bad shot tbe cashier, locked bis body in tbe vault, nailed the front door shut, taken tbe cash and escaped through the rear door. Tbe evidence to connect tbe defendant with tbe crime is circumstantial and will require a more adequate statement in that portion of tbis opinion wbicb will deal with its sufficiency.

Tbe defendant was indicted by a grand jury in LaMoure county on May 6, 1927. He later appeared and filed an affidavit of prejudice against tbe court and against tbe county. Tbe presiding judge, Hon. George M. McKenna, thereafter on June 14, 1927, made an order removing tbe action for further proceedings and for trial to Cass county, to wbicb county tbe records and proceedings were transmitted. On September 28, 1927, tbe defendant was again indicted by a grand jury in LaMoure county for tbe same crime as that charged in tbe indictment of May 6th. After tbe return of tbe second indictment an ex parte application, dated October 1, 1927, was made by tbe attorneys for tbe prosecution for an order of dismissal of tbe indictment of May 6th and it was accordingly dismissed by an order signed by the district judge presiding in Cass county. Tbe order of dismissal was signed October 6, 1927, and recites as reasons that a subseqiient indictment bad been returned charging the defendant in tbe first indictment with tbe same crime as that charged therein and that the state bad elected to proceed upon the second indictment, that returned on September 28th. The record shows some' very questionable proceedings with reference to the empanelling of the first grand jury, which go to tbe validity of the indictment. It therefore suggests the existence of substantial reasons for procuring a second indictment. Tbe defendant was never required to plead to the first indictment.

The 'record is voluminous. There are seventy-six assignments of error and twenty-three additional assignments on tbe instructions of the court to the jury in addition to the specifications of the insufficiency of tbe evidence. The first seven assignments are grouped for argument by tbe appellant under the head of jurisdiction of the district court of LaMoure county to proceed with the trial of the defendant *87 under tbe second indictment. Tbe power of tbe district court of Cass county to dismiss tbe prosecution under tbe first indictment is also questioned. Tbe proceedings disclose tbe theory of tbe prosecution to be that there may be more than one indictment against a person for tbe same offense and that a prior indictment may be dismissed and a defendant tried under a subsequent indictment regardless of any proceedings that may have been taken under a prior indictment to secure a change of tbe place of trial; whereas, it is tbe theory of tbe defendant and appellant that after proceedings are taken on a prior indictment, to secure a change of judge and a change of place of trial in a criminal case, there can be no subsequent proceedings looking toward a prosecution for tbe same offense in tbe county where the indictment was procured, particularly where a second indictment is procured in circumstances that might deprive tbe defendant of tbe benefit of tbe change previously obtained.

When tbe case was called for trial in LaMoure county tbe defendant was permitted to withdraw bis plea of not guilty and to file written objections to tbe jurisdiction of tbe court, together with a motion to quash. These objections and tbe motion were overruled. In denying tbe motion, tbe court expressed tbe reservation that tbe defendant should have time and .opportunity to make application for a change of venue in tbe second action if be should desire. Tbe court also overruled a demurrer to tbe indictment, whereupon tbe defendant interposed a plea of not guilty and tbe trial proceeded.

Tbe appellant argues that that portion of tbe ruling of tbe trial judge, wherein tbe court offered to give tbe defendant time to make an application to change tbe venue of tbe trial under tbe second indictment, could not operate to secure to him tbe enjoyment of such a right for tbe reason that there was no opportunity to file tbe affidavit “not less than five days before tbe opening day of tbe term,” as tbe statute requires. Sess. Laws 1927, chap. 215. Whatever substance there is in this argument is contained in tbe suggestion that through tbe action of tbe court tbe defendant lost tbe right to apply for a change of place of trial under tbe second indictment. Tbe record shows that during a special term of tbe district court of LaMoure county, on October 3, 1927, tbe defendant appeared and filed a demurrer to tbe second in-, dietment, in which, among other grounds, it was recited that tbe court *88 bad no jurisdiction of the offense on account of the change of place of trial previously secured under the first indictment. It shows that the demurrer was overruled and that the defendant was arraigned. On advice of counsel he declined to plead and a plea of not guilty was entered for him, whereupon the special term of the court was that day adjourned sine die. It further appears that the regular term of the district court at which the defendant was tried was convened on the 1st day of November, 1927. It appears, then, that there was ample time after the defendant had been held to answer to the district court under the second indictment for him to have availed himself of the statutory procedure for obtaining a change of place of trial, even construing the statute as appellant construes it. Hence, there is no merit in this suggestion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 878, 58 N.D. 82, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tucker-nd-1929.