286 S.W. 1065 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1926
Certifying the law.
The appellee, James Wilson, was tried for the crime of wilful murder at the November, 1924, term of the McCreary circuit court. He was convicted of the crime of manslaughter. At that term of court he filed his motion and grounds for a new trial and later at the same term, and before his motion had been passed upon, additional grounds. On the 20th day of this November, 1924, term the court entered an order overruling Wilson's motion for a new trial. That order in part reads: "To all of which ruling and judgment of the court the defendant, James Wilson, objects and excepts, and prays an appeal to the Kentucky Court of Appeals, which is now granted." Wilson was given time to prepare and file his bill of exceptions, which he later did, and thereafter he undertook to prosecute an appeal to this court. That appeal was dismissed in this court on the motion of the Commonwealth because of Wilson's failure to file the record in this court within the time prescribed by law. *745 On the second day of March, 1926, term of the McCreary circuit court the Commonwealth moved the filing in that court of the mandate of this court dismissing Wilson's appeal. It was then discovered that no final judgment had ever been rendered against Wilson in accordance with sections 283, et seq., of the Criminal Code, nor had any judgment in Wilson's case ever been entered in the order book. So on the next day the Commonwealth prepared and tendered a judgment and moved that it be entered. On Wilson's objection, the court took the matter under advisement. On the following day Wilson produced another motion and grounds for a new trial and filed them over the objection of the Commonwealth's attorney. The court thereupon overruled the motion of the Commonwealth's attorney to file the tendered judgment, sustained Wilson's motion and grounds for a new trial then filed, and awarded him the new trial he sought. The Commonwealth has appealed, asking that the law be certified.
We are of opinion that the trial court erred in permitting appellee to file the motion and grounds for a new trial he did at the March, 1926, term of the circuit court. Section 273 of the Criminal Code provides that an application for a new trial must be made at the same term at which the verdict is returned unless the judgment be postponed to another term, in which event the application may be made at any time before judgment. This section of the Code does not contemplate a series of motions for a new trial. Its language authorizes but one application, which application must be made at the term at which the verdict is rendered, unless the judgment be postponed, in which event it can be made at any time up to the judgment. So long as the motion is pending and undisposed of, additional grounds therefor may be filed. But when once the application has been passed upon, as was done here, there is no authority in the Code for the filing of another motion for a new trial. Further, there was no postponement of the judgment in this case as comes within the meaning of that term in the Code. It is obvious that the failure to comply with the Code requirements as to a judgment in this case was an oversight on the part of both the Commonwealth and the appellee. Indeed the latter undertook to prosecute an appeal to this court when there was no final judgment in the record, and, although his appeal was dismissed for other reasons, it *746
might well have been dismissed on this ground. When the Commonwealth's attorney tendered the judgment he did at the March, 1926, term, the court should have entered it, as we distinctly held in the similar case of Neace v. Commonwealth,
We are fortified in our conclusions as to the appellee's lack of right to file his second motion for a new trial by the opinion of this court in the case of Commonwealth v. Brogan,
Whole court sitting. *748