100 F. 293 | 8th Cir. | 1900
The chief error relied upon for a reversal of the judgment is that:
“The court erred in sustaining- the ruling of the court below, in denying defendant below (plaintiff in error) a change of judge upon his affidavit and mo*294 tion duly made and filed in strict conformity to law in sucli cases made and provided, and, in affirming ttte judgment and sentence of the trial court, denied the plaintiff in error his legal right to be tried by a fair and impartial tribunal.”
The organic law of the territory provides that:
“The supreme court of said territory or the chief justice thereof may designate any judge to try a particular ease or cases in any district when the judge of said district has.been of counsel, or is of kin to either party to the action, or interested, or biased or prejudiced in the cause or if for any other reason said judge is unable to hold court.” 28 Stat. 21, c. 5, § 3.
The territorial statute under which the application for a change of judge was made reads as follows:
“A criminal action prosecuted by indictment, or by information originally filed in the district court, may, at any time before the trial is begun, on the application of the defendant be removed from the court and county in which it is pending, as follows: First. * * * Second. * * * Third. * * * Fourth.' If it be shown to the court by the affidavit of the accused that he cannot have a fair and impartial trial by reason of the bias and prejudice of the presiding judge, or that the judge has been of counsel in said cause, or is of kin to either party to the action, or is interested, a change of judge shall be ordered, and the clerk of the district court shall immediately transmit to the clerk of the supreme court of the territory a certified copy of the order granting the change of judge, and the clerk of the supreme court shall, if said court be in" session, immediately present the same to the court, and if said court be not in session, then he shall at once deliver the same to the chief justice of the territory, and the supreme court, of the territory, or the chief justice thereof, as the ease may be, may designate any other district judge of the territory to try the cause: provided, that not more than one change from the county, and one change from the judge shall be allowed in any case.” St. Okl. § 5138, as amended by Laws 1895, p. 198.
The application of the defendant for a change of judge conformed to the requirements of this* statute, and the denial of the application by the trial court, and the affirmance of this ruling by the supreme court of the territory, were error. The statute is plain, unambiguous, and mandatory. Our attention has been called to a late opinion of the supreme court of the territory of Oklahoma—Lincoln v. Territory, 58 Pac. 730— in which that court construes the section of the statute we have quoted, and holds, and rightly, as we think, that when the accused makes affidavit that he cannot have a fair and impartial trial, by reason of the bias and prejudice of the presiding judge, it is the duty of the court to order a change of judge, to be effected in the mode provided by the statute, and that a refusal to do so is an error fatal on appeal to any judgment the court may thereafter render against the defendant in the cause. The conclusion reached on this point makes it unnecessary to consider any of the other questions discussed in the briefs, as none of them are likely to arise on a second trial. The judgment of the supreme court of the territory of Oklahoma and the judgment of the district court of Logan county, Okl., are each reversed, and the cause is remanded to the district court of Logan county, Okl., with instructions to grant a new trial.