41 Or. 309 | Or. | 1902
The defendant having been convicted of murder in the second degree, and the court below having refused to grant a certificate of probable cause, he has applied here for a stay of proceedings, pending the settlement and allowance of his bill of exceptions. The court below granted a temporary stay for the purpose of enabling the petitioner to apply to a justice of this court for the certificate, but refused to extend it until the bill of exceptions could be filed. While not in exact form, the application may be considered as one, primarily, for the certificate, and, incidentally, for a stay in the mean while, thus comprising the real question sought to be presented.
The judgment was entered October 29, 1900, and an order made extending the time for the preparation of the bill of exceptions to November 29th. Subsequent orders were made further extending the time to December 10th, then to January 1, 1901, then to January 15th, and finally to February 14th. The notice of appeal was served November 5, 1900, and on the 15th the defendant applied for a certificate of probable cause. On the 7th of December, he filed his affidavit, showing that he was without means, and moved the court to direct the stenographer who acted as official reporter pro tem. to make a transcript of her shorthand notes of the testimony and proceedings had at the trial, at the expense of the county, which motion was overruled. He further shows that some time later he procured the necessary means, and on December 20th, through his attorney, directed the stenographer to make the transcript; that, on January 10, 1901, the district attorney
It is urged that a justice of this court has power to stay the proceedings upon the judgment in criminal cases as an incident to his authority to issue a certificate of probable cause until such time as a bill of exceptions can be brought up, Avhereby to determine whether the certificate should issue. It is very apparent that this cannot be intelligently determined without the bill of exceptions, or some authenticated record shoAving probable error, hence it was held, in Ex parte Wachline, 32 Or. 204 (51 Pac. 1094), that the certificate could not be granted in the absence of such record. But it is not necessary to a determination of the controversy before me to pass upon the question of power to grant the stay. So I shall not attempt to do so at this time.