12 Ind. 448 | Ind. | 1859
Indictment for murder. The record, shows that at six o’clock, P. M., on Saturday, November 13,1858, being the last day of the November term of said Court, the jury impanneled in this case returned into Court, and
And thereupon the defendant objected to the reception of the verdict; but his objection was overruled, and the judge received it. He then moved that he be discharged from the prosecution, which motion was also overruled; and the judge, having refused a new trial, rendered judgment on the verdict, &c.
This Court will notice judicially that the November term, 1858, of the Monroe Circuit Court expired on Saturday, November 13; and further, that the November term of the Morgan Circuit Court in the same judicial circuit commenced on Monday, the 15th of said month. And it may be assumed—there being a case on trial and undisposed of at twelve o’clock of the night of Saturday—that that term of the Monroe Circuit Court did not expire until that horn; and had the Court, instead of adjourning at six o’clock, P. M., remained in session until the expiration of the term, an adjournment to the next term would have been in accordance with the ordinary mode of procedure, and the cause then in progress would have stood, continued. 2 R. S. p. 8, § 19. '
Hut in reference to this subject, we have a statutory rule, which says: “If any judge of the Circuit Court, &c., shall adjourn the Court before having gone through the business pending, and before the expiration of the time fixed by law, the record must show the reason for such adjournment.” 2 R. S. p. 222, § 793.
This provision contemplates an adjournment to a subsequent term, not to a day in vacation. If there is business pending, and the term is unexpired, the judge has no right, in any case, to adjourn beyond its expiration, unless such adjournment is made to reach a subsequent term of the Court, and not even then, unless the reason for the adjournment is made to appear in the record. But here, the judge, though he did adjourn while the term remained unexpired, and while a trial was in progress, has failed to place in the record any valid reason for such adjournment. And the result is, that the adjourning order, so far as it directs the Court to convene on Monday, the 15th of November, a day in vacation, and orders the jury to be confined until that day, is a nullity.
We are referred to Wright v. The State, 5 Ind. R. 290. In that case it was held, that the Circuit Court, having a trial before it at the close of the term, might continue its sitting until the case is fully determined. But it will at once be seen that that decision is not in point; because, in the case at bar, the order of adjournment was made at least six hours before the term closed by operation of law. In that space of time, it was clearly within the range of probability that the cause would have proceeded to final judgment, had the adjournment not been ordered. Indeed, the record plainly shows that such would have been the result, had the judge not absented himself, but continued the session of the Court until the term legally expired by lapse of time.
In view of the case made by the record, we must hold that the adjourning order in question terminated the sessions of the Court for the term in which it was made, and operated as a discontinuance of the cause then on trial. Shearer v. Clay, 1 Litt. 263.—Archer v. Ross, 2 Scam. 303. The verdict and judgment are, therefore, inoperative and void.
The judgment is reversed. Cause remanded, &c.