110 P. 493 | Or. | 1910
Opinion
This is an application for a stay of execution pending an appeal from a judgment of death. The defendant, Isaac N. Harrell, was indicted July 5, 1910, for the crime of murder in the first degree, alleged to have been committed in Lake County by killing Walter Newell. A motion was filed to set aside the indictment on the ground that it was not found, indorsed, or presented as required by law, in that the grand jury returning the same had no authority to inquire into the commission of the crime charged because the court on May 12, 1910, adjourned without designating any day for reconvening, and the time appointed for another term of the court had not arrived when the formal accusation' was found. This' motion was denied, whereupon a demurrer to the indictment, based practically on the same ground as stated in the motion, having been interposed and overruled, the defendant entered a plea of guilty as charged. The court then took testimony as to the grade of the homicide, and, finding the crime to have been murder in the first degree, imposed the sentence indicated.
The transcript directing attention to a regular term of the circuit court for Lake County contains a copy of a
“Gentlemen of the jury, it appears that there is nothing here for you to do. You have served very diligently and faithfully, and for some reason or other those indicted have pleaded guilty, and now the time has come to dismiss this jury. Lou may be excused until such time as you are notified to appear here. Then all of you come promptly at the time and we will all go to work.”
“And the court not being advised when the grand jury will complete its work, * * nor what date should justly be set for the trial, or further proceedings in the causes named above, nor when said petit jury should be recalled, * * and the court having the intention to resume sittings at this term, * * at such time as any report of said grand jury, * * or further proceedings in the cases named, or other cases, or any other business should require it, the court thereupon adjourned.”
A conviction in a criminal action is not stayed by an appeal from the judgment, unless the trial judge or a justice of the Supreme Court issues a certificate that in his opinion there is probable cause for the appeal. Section 1475, B. & C. Comp. In the application herein, the errors assigned, and upon which the defendant’s counsel will rely for a reversal of the judgment, are (1) the denial of the motion to set aside the indictment; (2) the overruling of the demurrer interposed to the formal accusation; (3) that the evidence received was insufficient to support the finding of murder in the first degree; (4) that the defendant was not given a fair hearing, but was compelled to go to trial at a time when public sentiment was so intense that it was impossible for him to secure an impartial consideration of the cause by a jury.
“To retain the power within himself and to control the times at which his court shall convene,- the judge must at each adjournment specify a time certain as the date when his court will again meet, or lose the power to hold any further sessions until the time as fixed by law. If this were not true, great injustice would frequently happen to litigants. A court could, as was done in the case under consideration, adjourn without fixing a time to again convene, and at a time entirely optional with the court, again convene and proceed to transact business, render judgments and decrees which might work great injustice, if such business were done in the absence of either of the parties to an action. And yet no redress could be had by the aggrieved party because the court would be in reguular session and his judgments in all respects in conformity with law. It was not the intention of the legislature to make it possible for courts to so transact their business, and no litigant should be kept in ignorance of the times when the court will sit.”
If, under the circumstances indicated in the language quoted, a court after adjourning without designating a day for reassembling could convene, try causes, and render valid judgments and decrees without notifying interested parties, we yield our consent to the conclusion thus announced. In the sparsely settled counties of Oregon, though the practice of adjourning court without designating a day for convening is common, no appeal has been brought to this court where the error assigned has been the lack of sufficient notice to interested parties of the reassembling of the court, or the want of an adequate
“The term of the court is fixed by law. Having once opened, it so continues till the term expires, or an adjournment sine die is made. The adjournment from day to day does not suspend its functions. After the court has adjourned for the day, it is a common practice for grand juries to continue their sessions, swear witnesses, pursue their investigations, and find bills, and petit juries frequently remain out all night in deliberation, and make up their verdicts, while the journal shows that the court has adjourned. Each of these juries is part of the court, performing important functions; and the court is always in session in fact, so that it can protect the juries, and enforce proper conduct on their part.”
“The court had not adjourned to a specific day, but had merely made an order, now become entirely customary with our courts and with the courts of the United States, that the term be ‘held open,’ the effect of which is merely that the adjournment is to a time to be fixed in the future according to the exigencies of business.”
In view of the plea interposed and of the course pursued, we do not think there is probable cause for the appeal and a certificate to that effect should be denied, and it is so ordered. Certificate Denied.