295 S.W. 886 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1927
Reversing.
The appellants, Grady Hudson and James Engle, were convicted in the Harlan circuit court upon their trial under an indictment therein accusing them of the crime of feloniously breaking into a garage, the property of another, and stealing therefrom property of value, an offense denounced by section 1164 of the present Kentucky Statutes, and their punishment was fixed by the verdict at confinement in the penitentiary for one year each. Their joint motion for a new trial was overruled, and they have appealed.
The indictment was returned on August 25, 1926, and on the 31st day of that month defendants were brought into court for the purpose of setting a day for their trial, and an order was made setting the prosecution for trial on September 6, or one week thereafter. It appears that defendants were then in jail in default of bail, and their attorney, immediately upon setting the prosecution for trial, procured the clerk of the court to issue a subpoena for his clients' witnesses, who resided in the county and some distance from the county seat, and they were Herman Stevens, Sam Farmer, McKinley Storms, Hershel Engle, and Ed. McFarlin. The subpoena was delivered to the sheriff of the county on that day. On the 3d and 4th days of September, the last of *583 which was Saturday, defendants' counsel approached the sheriff about the execution of the subpoena, and was informed each time that one of his deputies had the subpoena, but named a different deputy each time, and that it had not been returned to the office, and the deputy who had it was absent.
On the morning of the 6th of September, the day set for trial, the subpoena was still not returned, but the deputy to whom it was claimed it had been delivered for execution was present, and stated that he received it on Sunday, the 5th of September, in the afternoon, and he had been unable to execute it. So that there was no way for defendants or their counsel to ascertain whether the subpoena had been executed, or if only partially executed, upon whom it was served. It was then ascertained, however, that none of the witnesses for whom the subpoena was issued was present. An unfinished trial occupied the remainder of that day, and on the morning of September 7 the prosecution was called for trial, and defendants' counsel again inquired of the sheriff concerning the subpoena, when he found it in the hands of the county attorney, and there had been written into it the names of the commonwealth's witnesses, upon whom it had been executed, but the return on it as to defendants' witnesses was "Not found." Counsel then announced that he was not ready for trial, and moved for a "reasonable time" in which to prepare an affidavit for a continuance; but the court overruled it, and declined to give counsel time to present his grounds for postponement or continuance of the trial, to which exception was taken.
After the verdict, and as a part of the motion for new trial, the affidavits of defendants and their counsel were filed, and in which it was stated that three of the witnesses for whom subpoena had been issued would establish a complete alibi for defendants, and that the others would testify to impeaching statements made in their presence by the chief prosecuting witness, and who confessed on the witness stand that he and the two defendants committed the crime. Those statements were, in substance, that the prosecuting witness, within a short time after the commission of the crime, stated in the presence of defendants' witnesses that "he had to make a confession in order to save his own scalp, and that it was the closest call he ever had." It is perfectly apparent *584 that all of the testimony of the absent witnesses, as so developed, was vitally material to the defense, and under the court's ruling the defendants were deprived of the benefit of that testimony, not even being allowed the privilege of presenting it by the weakest method of an affidavit for continuance.
It is likewise doubtful if there was any evidence to establish the corpus delicti (the breaking into the garage — see Bruce v. Com.,
It may be that defendants are guilty, but as said by us in the case of Neely v. Strong,
Surely no one would contend for a moment that either defendants or their attorney were guilty of any sort of neglect in making ready for the prosecution, or in not preparing the affidavit beforehand, and, if there were any grounds to sustain the court's action in declining to give counsel time to prepare the affidavit, they are to be found outside of the record filed in this court. It has often been said that courts are vested with a large discretion in refusing or granting continuances, but such discretion is a judicial and not an arbitrary one, and unless it can be said from the entire record that the court abused its discretion in such matters this court will not ordinarily interfere. But where the very fundamental rights of a litigant, including a defendant in a criminal prosecution, have been wholly disregarded, and the established rules of practice, formulated for the purpose of enforcing such rights, have been likewise disregarded, there is but one course for this court to pursue, which is to hold that the discretion with which the trial court was vested was improperly exercised, and when it operates to deprive the litigant of the benefit in some form of most material and practically all of his testimony it cannot be said that the error was not prejudicial to his substantial rights.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, with directions to set it aside and to sustain the motion for a new trial, and for proceedings consistent with this opinion.