Ex Parte Spelce

103 So. 705 | Ala. | 1925

Defendant interposed a plea of former jeopardy. The state's demurrer was sustained. Defendant complains of this ruling as error and insists that the sufficiency of the plea should be determined on the facts therein alleged. The substance of the plea was that the jury on a former trial had been discharged without a verdict, and that the order for such discharge failed to show a sufficient reason therefor. On the day on which the plea was filed, the same being a day of the term at which the former trial had been had, the judge of the circuit who had presided at the former trial, acting ex mero, amended the bench note so as to make it show beyond peradventure a sufficient legal and constitutional reason for the discharge of the jury on the former trial, and, thereupon, the demurrer to defendant's plea was sustained, though, as yet, the minute entry showing the amendment had not been written by the clerk. It may be conceded that there was technical error in this ruling against the plea, for, as defendant contends, the sufficiency of the plea was determinable on the facts alleged therein and without reference to facts aliunde. The Court of Appeals was of opinion that the ruling in question, if error, was error without injury for the reason that, "if he [defendant] were given another trial, he would be confronted by the minute entry" showing the amendment of the order discharging the jury. We concur in the opinion that the trial court had the right during the term, ex mero, to amend the bench note to make it speak the truth and that the trial court might well proceed on the assumption that in due time the minutes would be made to show the order as amended. We also concur in the ruling to this effect, in substance, that, if there was error in the trial court's ruling on the demurrer, it could avail defendant nothing; this for the reason, as the matter appears to us, that the court knew its own records and therefore knew the plea could not be sustained, so that the plea was due to be overruled — in fact, the method of arriving at the result being not of controlling importance.

The court is not of opinion that reversible error is shown of the other rulings of the Court of Appeals complained of in the defendant's petition for certiorari.

The petition must be denied.

ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.

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