United States v. Hoyt

7 Alaska 276
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedFebruary 9, 1925
DocketNo. 910-C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Alaska 276 (United States v. Hoyt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Hoyt, 7 Alaska 276 (D. Alaska 1925).

Opinion

CDEGG, 'District Judge

(orally). In this case a motion was argued last week for a change of venue at the instance of the government.

The motion is based upon two grounds: First, that a fair [278]*278and impartial trial cannot be had at Fairbanks, where the headquarters of the court are held; and, second, that a necessary witness on behalf of the government, who has been regularly subpoenaed, cannot attend the trial on account of her physical condition. This motion is supported by affidavits to the number of 45, or thereabouts.

■ The defendant has filed a protest against the granting of a change of venue, and objects thereto on constitutional grounds, and on the further ground that the court has no authority to transfer the case from this place to any other place in the territory of Alaska, and that it would work a prejudice against the defendant if the court did do so, and this resistance on the part of the defendant and his objections are supported by the affidavit of his attorney, by his own affidavit, and by the affidavits of 70 other people.

At the time set for the defendant to make a showing in resistance to the motion of the government, the government’s attorneys made a supplemental showing, as they call it, which consists of certified copies of the newspaper articles published by the Fairbanks News-Miner, a local newspaper published at Fairbanks, Alaska, and the only newspaper published in the Fourth division at any near distance from the headquarters of the court, and also a counter showing consisting of a further publication made in the same newspaper since the filing of the government’s motion for the change of venue.

When this was done, the defendant asked for further time to make any showing in reply, and it was granted. Defendant then filed 17 affidavits of other persons resident in the community in opposition to the supplemental showing and counter-showing of the government.

The court has examined all the jpapers submitted here on behalf of both parties as carefully as he could and as cautiously as time has permitted, and has listened to the arguments of the attorneys on both sides; the argument of the defendant’s attorney lasting about four hours, including citations of law.

It appears from the showing made by the government, and it is in no way denied, that showing being made by the affidavit of P. D. Neil, post office inspector, that after the witness Mrs. C. J. Diass, formerly Miss Dorene Mellon, had been subpoenaed by the government in this case, following the calling of dhe term of court here, to appear here on the first day of the term [279]*279on which the trial jury would be present, that he went to San Francisco for the purpose of interviewing the lady, in view of the fact that he had been informed that she refused to attend on account of her physical condition.

The affidavit recites that the witness claimed to him that she was in a pregnant condition, and that she had been advised by her physician it would be dangerous to herself, and perhaps to her life and the life of her prospective child, if she undertook the hardships of a trip to Alaska, particularly crossing the Gulf of Alaska and the hardships of the trip into the interior to Fairbanks. This witness, I believe the record shows, is at Los Angeles, in the state of California.

It is not denied by the defendant that the case of the government was to be presented at this term of court, at the first day of the term, but that by stipulation of counsel, both on the part of the government and the defendant, this case was postponed until the case of United States v. John L. White was tried and disposed of. The case, then, of United States v. Romeo Hoyt became the second case for trial on the calendar, instead of the first, as theretofore agreed, and the government has now in attendance three witnesses from the state of Washington, P. L. Neil, Joseph Knizek, and Lee Gordon, one witness from either San Francisco or Los Angeles, Frank P. Wood, and has another witness coming here from Indiana to attend the trial. The government is ready to proceed with the trial of the case, were it not for the fact that this witness, Mrs. Diass, formerly Lorene Mellon, is not here. All of the defendant’s witnesses apparently, so far as the court knows, are here.

It is not denied by the defendant that the government has acted with due diligence in attempting to secure the attendance of the witness Mrs. Diass, formerly Lorene Mellon, or that they have been negligent in so procuring her attendance; nor is it denied that the testimony of this witness, which the court heard on the former trial, is competent and relevant and material to the trial of the case on the part of the government, and that she is one of the most important witnesses, if not the main witness, on the part of the government.

In that view of the case, the government contends that they cannot have a fair and impartial trial because of the absence of this material witness, through no fault of theirs, in spite' of their exercise of due diligence, and, in addition to that fact, [280]*280that the people of the community here are so prejudiced either in behalf of the government or the defendant that neither the government nor the defendant can have a fair trial. The showing made by the defendant, in addition to the showing made by his attorney, by way of affidavit, does not touch the matters contended for by the government with respect to the affidavit of the defendant himself.

This motion being tendered to a court who had not had the experience of having lived, as the judge of this court has, in this community for the past 17 years, and who knows not only the defendant and the attorney for about that time, and nearly everybody who has testified either on behalf of the government or on behalf of the defendant in the respective showings of the parties on this motion, might well experience some difficulty — I say, if it were not for that experience, and for the experience that the court had in the previous trial, which lasted for about 20 days, and if the court had not seen with his own eyes the interest of the people of the community as they attended the trial in such crowds as could gain entrance into the courtroom, there would be perhaps some difficulty in the court deciding this motion honestly and fairly and legally. If the case were not the case that it is, a case where it is charged that' larceny was committed in the United States post office at Fairbanks, and if it were not true that the defendant was a resident of the town of Fairbanks, and has been such resi7 dent, with his wife, for the greater part of that time, there would be some additional difficulty presented'. But the court has the benefit of this knowledge, and the solution is by no means difficult, so far as the court views both the showings made and the law of the case as it stands upon the statutes.

The general effect of the affidavits presented on behalf of the government is to the effect that their respective affiants have "lived in this community for a considerable period of time, that they have heard this case discussed numbers of times by great numbers of people, and that in such discussions the people whom they heard discussing it expressed opinions as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, and upon this statement of fact the various and respective affiants allege that in their opinion a fair and impartial trial cannot be had in this division.

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7 Alaska 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hoyt-akd-1925.