328 S.W.2d 418 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1959
On November S, 1958, the grand jury of Laurel County returned indictments against Charles Brashear, Reed Osborne, and Ralph and Virginia Whitaker accusing' each of the several parties of the “offense of suffering and permitting a game of chance,” namely, a pin-ball machine, at which money was won and lost, to be conducted and operated in places under their respective occupation and control. On November 7 the parties appeared and executed bail bonds. On that day, over the
The Brashear case was passed to the next day, November 12. On that day the Commonwealth’s attorney filed responses in which he admitted that the defendants’ attorney had made the representations to the court as described; but the judge had stated that if he could not be present, the defendants should immediately employ another attorney. The presiding judge did the unusual thing of filing his own affidavits, stating that he had so advised the defendants’ attorney and further that he had told him he was assigning the cases for November 11 and 12 “because he did not have any other cases to try on that date and the following day to try.”
On the day set for the trials the court overruled the motions for a continuance. The cases proceeded to trial, one after the other before practically the same jurors. The defendants were present but not represented by counsel. They remained silent throughout. The juries found the defendants guilty and fixed the penalty in each case at a fine of $250. - Motions for appeals have been filed and the cases consolidated here.
It is well settled that granting a continuance is in a large measure within the discretion of the trial court; but where it appears to this court that in overruling such a motion there was an abuse of judicial discretion, the judgments will be reversed in the interest of fairness and justice. While the same degree of strictness may not apply in misdemeanor as in felony cases, yet parties charged with such lesser offenses also have the right to a fair trial conducted in due course. In these cases the defendants were not lacking in diligence, but reasonable opportunity to prepare for trial was not recognized by the court.
We are of opinion that there was abuse of discretion in overruling the motions for continuance. The several motions for appeals are sustained, the appeals are granted, and the judgments are
Reversed.