THE PEOPLE ex rel. Latham Castle, Attorney General, Petitioner, vs. HARRY C. DANIELS et al., Judges, Respondents.
No. 33693
Supreme Court of Illinois
January 19, 1956
Rehearing denied March 19, 1956
8 Ill. 2d 43
The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Appellate Court reversed; circuit court affirmed.
DAVIS, J., dissenting.
LATHAM CASTLE, Attorney General, of Springfield, (FRED G. LEACH, MURRAY F. MILNE, and ALBERT E. JENNER, JR., of counsel,) for petitioner.
SEARS AND SOLFISBURG, of Aurora, for respondents.
Mr. CHIEF JUSTICE HERSHEY delivered the opinion of the court:
By leave of this court, the Attorney General has filed an original petition for mandamus asking us to direct the respondents (judges of the circuit court of Kane County) to vacate an order of May 9, 1955, denying the motion of the Attorney General for a nolle prosequi in a certain criminal prosecution pending in that court. (People v. Lloyd C. Moody, No. 54-757.) The Attorney General further asks that we direct them to enter nunc pro tunc, as of May 9, 1955, an order of nolle prosequi on said motion, and to vacate all proceedings and orders (including the verdict and judgment) subsequently entered in the cause.
The undisputed facts disclose the following: On July 26, 1954, a Kane County grand jury returned four embezzlement indictments against Lloyd C. Moody. (Nos. 54-754 through 54-757.) Each of the first three indictments charged the embezzlement of a particular sum of money from a certain individual, but the fourth (No. 54-757) was
On July 30, 1954, the indictments were set for trial as the first case of the September, 1954, petit jury, but on motion of the court were continued to September 13, 1954. On the latter date, there was a continuance (the record not showing at whose request) to the November term. A hearing was held on November 5, 1954, at which time certain motions made on behalf of defendant Moody were denied. Three days later, on November 8, 1954, counsel agreed to a setting on November 29, 1954, and at the request of the court the assistant State‘s Attorney made an election to proceed on No. 54-757.
Defendant Moody‘s present counsel entered the case on November 26, 1954, and the trial date was changed to January 11, 1955. By agreement, this was extended to February 14, 1955. Then, on motion of the State‘s Attorney, the court continued the case to March 21, 1955. At that time the State‘s Attorney sought to proceed on No. 54-756, but the court insisted that because of the previous election he had to prosecute No. 54-757. Whereupon, the latter moved to enter a nolle prosequi in No. 54-757, stating in argument that “there is a possibility in the proof that there would be a variance as to the proof of ownership.” (This was predicated upon a belief that there would be a variance as to the embezzlement alleged in No. 54-755, and since No. 54-757 was a consolidated indictment the variance would arise in the latter case also.) The court denied this motion on April 21, 1955.
The State‘s Attorney then requested the Attorney General to enter his appearance on behalf of the People of the State of Illinois, and shortly thereafter, with consent of the State‘s Attorney, the Attorney General moved to nol-pros No. 54-757. The Attorney General alleged in this motion that there would be a fatal variance between the proof and the allegation of the ownership of the money
The trial court (Judge Harry C. Daniels, presiding) denied the Attorney General‘s motion, and both the Attorney General and the State‘s Attorney refused to participate further in the proceedings. On the following day, May 10, 1955, circuit judge Mel Abrahamson impanelled a jury to try indictment No. 54-757, and on motion of counsel for defendant Moody directed a verdict of not guilty. After the not guilty verdict was returned, the court entered judgment thereon and discharged the defendant.
On May 16, 1955, the Attorney General requested leave of this court to file a petition for an original writ of mandamus, which we granted. Judge Harry C. Daniels, who died during the pendency of these proceedings, has been dismissed as a respondent.
To decide the issue, we must consider the following: (1) Was the Attorney General properly in the case? (2) If so, did the court err in refusing to allow his motion to nol-pros the indictment?
First, was the Attorney General properly in the case?
Apart from authority which is vested in the Attorney General by the Illinois constitution, he has by statute the right to assist a State‘s Attorney in the prosecution of a case. (
In construing the foregoing, we have held that the Attorney General is authorized to appear not only for consultation and advice but also for whatever assistance may be desirable and beneficial to the prosecution, both during
We have never viewed the powers vested in the State‘s Attorney as exclusive of those vested in the Attorney General. See Lawless, “The Relationship Between the Attorney-General and the State‘s Attorney in Illinois,” 1949 Law Forum 507.
There is no conflict between the two officers as to the authority residing in each, since the Attorney General intervened at the request of the State‘s Attorney and acted in aid of the latter. Therefore, it is clear that the Attorney General was properly in the case.
Second, did the court err in refusing to allow the motion to nol-pros the indictment?
The Attorney General, whose office is created by the
Among the powers of the Attorney General at common law was the right to nol-pros an indictment at all stages of a criminal prosecution before the jury was impanelled or before the trial of the case, except that the action could not be capriciously or vexatiously repetitious. In the Covelli case, the Attorney General‘s conduct was not repetitious at all, since the motion considered was the first nolle prosequi filed in the matter. Accordingly, by mandamus we compelled the trial court to enter an order of nolle prosequi as of the date of filing and expunged a subsequent order discharging the defendant.
Moreover, it is shown that the Attorney General, after investigating the matter, concluded there would be a fatal variance between the charge and the proof with a resulting miscarriage of justice. For, as noted, it was believed there would be a fatal variance in No. 54-755, one of the separate indictments, and because No. 54-757 was a consolidated indictment, a fatal variance would arise in that prosecution also. Hence, he was faced with a practical problem. If there was an acquittal on the consolidated indictment, prosecution of the other three would be barred. To prevent this, and to save the two indictments where no variance was thought to exist (Nos. 54-754 and 54-756), he had no alternative but to nol-pros No. 54-757. In so acting, the Attorney General clearly did not abuse the discretion vested in him.
There is no record of harassment here, as suggested by respondent‘s counsel in oral argument. There was no repetition, only one continuance was secured on motion of the State‘s Attorney, and there is nothing to indicate that either the State‘s Attorney or the Attorney General did not act in good faith with a desire to prevent an injustice. Despite the previous election to prosecute the indictment, had they gone to trial under these circumstances they certainly would not have acted as the people of this State have a right to expect law officers to act in the enforcement of the criminal law.
There is nothing to demonstrate any abuse of discretion on the part of the Attorney General; therefore, the respondents were under a mandatory duty to enter the order of nolle prosequi.
Writ awarded.
Mr. JUSTICE KLINGBIEL took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
Mr. JUSTICE DAVIS, dissenting:
I am forced to disagree with what the majority have said about the relationship between the State‘s Attorney and the Attorney General and with their conclusion that this case is controlled by People ex rel. Elliott v. Covelli, 415 Ill. 79.
The Attorney General relied on his common-law powers to sustain his position in this case. He earnestly maintains that his power to nol-pros is absolute, in the absence of capricious and vexatious repetition; that it is not affected by the consent or lack of consent of the State‘s Attorney, and that the exercise of the power is not subject to review. I believe the majority‘s decision accepts the logic of the Attorney General in its entirety, but I do not believe this acceptance is justified by law nor commended to us by any practical considerations.
The majority reasons syllogistically that the Attorney General was properly in the case by reason of his statutory authority to “consult,” “advise,” and “assist” the State‘s Attorney. (
I believe the majority‘s error lies in the failure to distinguish the Attorney General‘s common-law role as chief legal advisor to the Crown, and his statutory role of assisting another constitutional officer, the State‘s Attorney. To understand this distinction requires a consideration of the development of the doctrine of the common-law powers of the Attorney General. The leading Illinois case on the subject is Fergus v. Russel, 270 Ill. 304. This court there held in a four-to-three decision that the English common law was a part of the law of this State, and that by the constitution the Attorney General was vested with the common-law powers of the chief law officer of the Crown. It should be carefully noted that the question there involved the right of the Attorney General to represent State officers. There was no conflict or overlapping of the Attorney General‘s function and that of any other constitutional officer. It was there pointed out that these common-law powers existed “except where the constitution or a constitutional statute may provide otherwise.”
In the Covelli case we relied on the doctrine of Fergus v. Russel in considering the common-law right of the Attorney General to enter a nolle prosequi in a case in which he was the statutory prosecuting officer. Again the case involved no conflict with any other constitutional officer with regard to his powers or duties. The Attorney General was there the only one entitled to handle the prosecution. (People ex rel. Elliott v. Covelli, 415 Ill. 79.) There we specifically noted that we were not dealing with a case in which the State‘s Attorney was the ordinary public prosecutor.
I conceive this to be a vital distinction. We have clearly held that a State‘s Attorney can nol-pros only with the consent of the court, and that the court‘s discretion in this
Considering that this case involves a local criminal prosecution instituted and conducted by the State‘s Attorney, and that the Attorney General first appeared in the case nine months after indictment and on the day set for trial, I cannot see why this case should not be governed by our decision in People ex rel. Hoyne v. Newcomer, 284 Ill. 315. In that case, at page 325, we said: “If a State‘s Attorney has absolute and uncontrolled power to enter a nolle prosequi upon his official responsibility in one case, of course, he has the same power in two, three or four hundred, as in this instance; but we regard it as essential to the due administration of justice and the protection of the people by the enforcement of criminal laws that he should not have such power but the consent and approval of the court should be required.” I believe the same result should obtain here. In the case before us, the trial court and the State‘s Attorney were in a much better position to determine the requirements of justice than either the Attorney General or this court. I consider it most unwise to permit either the State‘s Attorney, or the Attorney General when he enters the case at the eleventh hour to assist the State‘s Attorney, to have the untrammeled power to dismiss a public prosecution. Even the limited record before us shows that the considerations of justice that motivated the late Judge Daniels to deny the motion to nol-pros arose long before
