State v. Turner

152 So. 567, 178 La. 927, 1934 La. LEXIS 1319
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1934
DocketNo. 32577.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 152 So. 567 (State v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Turner, 152 So. 567, 178 La. 927, 1934 La. LEXIS 1319 (La. 1934).

Opinion

OVERTON, Justice.

On June 24, 1933, the defendants, three in number, drove into the village of Grayson, in Caldwell parish, from a distant locality. On arriving at their point of destination in the Village, two of the defendants, Turner and Manteris, descended from the automobile to enter the Grayson Bank, and the remaining defendant began circling the block on which the bank was located. Turner and Manteris entered the bank and Wells continued to circle the block, intending to stop on arriving again at the bank. Turner and Manteris having entered the bank, notified the officials present that their presence meant a “holdup,” and ordered them, with pistols drawn, to throw up their hands. The officials obeyed. One of them spontaneously cried that there was no money in the bank, as it was in liquidation. One of the defendants answered by shooting him down, and the remaining defendant, who entered the bank, shot the other official down at once. Neither official died of the wounds received, nor was any money obtained by the would-be robbers.

Six days after this attempted robbery and the attempted murders, the trial judge issued an order that the grand jury • be convened for July 3, 1933. It so happened that the day the grand jury was ordered to be convened was the last day of court before the summer vacation, as prescribed by the rules of court. The trial judge, realizing this, undertook to amend the rules of court, so .as to make the ten months’ period for holding court include the month of July, thereby extending the court period a. month later in the year. He, or they, as there are two judges allotted to the district, issued an order making the change, and caused it to be entered on the minutes of court. The order, however, was *931 published but once in the official journal of each parish in the district.

The grand jury convened on the day ordered, and, on the same day, returned a bill of indictment against defendants, under Act No. 2i of 1882, making it a capital offense for any one in the attempted perpetration of a robbery to shoot another with the intent to commit the crime of murder.

The bill of indictment contains two counts. In the first count, all three defendants are charged with having shot R. G. Baygent with intent to murder, while attempting to perpetrate robbery, and in the second, with having, at the same time and place, and as a continuation of the same unlawful transaction, shot Rush Tarver, with intent to murder, while attempting to perpetrate robbery.

Defendants were arraigned on this bill on July 8,1033, and each pleaded not guilty. On the trial had', Turner and Manteris were found guilty as charged, which carries with it the death penalty, and Wells was found guilty without capital punishment, which carries with it life imprisonment in the penitentiary.

The act of the trial judge in convening the grand jury for July 3, 1933, to consider the charge against defendants, and his act in receiving and causing to be filed the indictment returned against defendants on the same .'day, caused defendants to ask to withdraw their pleas of not guilty and to present for filing a motion to quash the indictment on the ground that it was found by a- grand jury convened during the vacation period of court, and was returned by it and filed during that period, all contrary to law. The trial judge, on motion of the district attorney, refused' to permit the withdrawal of the pleas of not guilty to the end that the motion to quash might be considered. A bill of exceptions was taken to the refusal of the judge, and the motion to quash' was permitted to be filed for the purpose of being attached to the bill of exceptions.'

The drawing and summoning of a panel of petit jurors to try defendants during July also provoked a motion to quash the panel on the theory that such a panel was an illegal one, and that a jury drawn from it would be without authority to pass upon the guilt or innocence of defendants. The motion to quash the panel was overruled and a bill of exception was reserved.

The regular panel was exhausted without the selection of a single juror, and defendant objected, when presented with the tales jurors summoned, to going to trial before a jury selected from them, for the reason that the jury to be impaneled would be without jurisdiction to try the case, as the time of trial was the vacation period of the court; there having been no compliance with the law giving district judges the right to extend a session of court into such a period. This objection was overruled, and a bill of exception was taken to the ruling.

The foregoing objection and motions relate to the same matter, namely, to the validity and effectiveness of the order of court, taking July from the vacation period, and putting it into the period for holding court, and to the right of the trial judge to try a felony case during the vacation period, as well as, though remotely, to' convene the grand jury during that period to investigate cases and to return true bills.

*933 We prefer, in considering the matter here presented, to take up for consideration the third hill of exception, which is the one taken when the tales jurors were presented. There, the objection urged raises more clearly and directly the question of the right of the court to proceed on the order extending the term of court.

Section 43 of article 7 of the Constitution provides that: “District Courts, the Civil District Court and the Criminal District Court for the parish of Orleans excepted, shall hold continuous sessions during ten months of the year. * * * In each district composed of more than one parish, the judge shall sit alternately in each parish, as the public business may require. * * * ”

The second paragraph of section 42 of article 7 of the Constitution provides that: “The district judges shall have authority to try at any time misdemeanors, and, when the jury is waived by the defendant, all cases not capital or necessarily punishable at hard labor, and to receive pleas of guilty, in all eases less than capital.”

In order to carry out article 117 of the Constitution of 1898, which has been carried substantially into the present Constitution as section 43 of article 7, quoted supra, the Legislature enacted Act No. 163 of 1S9S, the second and third sections of which read as follows:

“Sec. 2. * * * In districts composed of more than one parish the Judge shall sit alternately in. each parish and the session from one parish to the other, shall be continuous, provided that no session in any parish of a District shall be fixed for less than one week or more than three weeks, as the public business may require. The District Judge shall, by an order of Court fix a date for the holding of the sessions in each parish, which order shall be entered on the minutes of the Court and published at least three times in the official journal, in each parish, and after being so filxed, no change shall be made in such order within less than one year thereafter.
“Sec. 3.

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 567, 178 La. 927, 1934 La. LEXIS 1319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-turner-la-1934.