263 P. 866 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
The defendant was convicted in the superior court of Yolo County of two offenses set forth in two separate counts in the information, to wit, the crime of burglary and the crime of robbery. He appeals from the judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial. *569
The present appeals are the outgrowth of a second trial of the defendant for the two distinct charges set forth as stated.
At the first trial of the case the defendant was jointly charged with one Fitzgibbons for the crimes named and the two were jointly tried with certain other parties charged in a different information with participation in the commission of the same crimes, all the accused, except one, who pleaded guilty, being found guilty. Each of the convicted defendants appealed to this court from the judgment of conviction and the order denying a new trial to each. This court, in an opinion by Justice Plummer, reversed the judgment and the order entered in the case of O'Connor (the appellant here) and Fitzgibbons, and remanded the cause for a trial de novo. (People v. O'Connor,
[1] The single point submitted here for determination involves the proposition, advanced by defendant, that the trial court committed error in its refusal to grant the motion of defendant to dismiss the prosecution on the ground that the defendant was not brought to trial within sixty days after theremittitur from this court, certifying to the reversal by this court of the judgment and the order, was filed with the clerk of the court below. The motion was founded on section
"The court, unless good cause to the contrary is shown, must order the prosecution to be dismissed in the following cases:
"1. When a person has been held to answer for a public offense, if an indictment is not found or an information filed against him, within thirty days thereafter.
"2. If a defendant, whose trial has not been postponed upon his application, is not brought to trial within sixty days after the finding of the indictment, or filing of the information."
A motion similar to the one with which we are here concerned was made in behalf of Edward Brock, who, though not proceeded against in the same information in which the defendant herein was informed against, was, nevertheless, charged with precisely the same offenses — that is to say, that the two defendants named were accused of having committed, *570
jointly with certain other parties, the two offenses above mentioned, but by two different and distinct informations. The appeals growing out of the second trials of both Brock and O'Connor were submitted to this court for decision at its December (1927) term. In the Brock case an opinion by Justice Plummer affirming the judgment and the order was handed down by and filed in this court on December 15, 1927. (People v.Brock,
The remittitur from this court certifying to the reversal of the judgment on the first appeal of the cases of the defendants was filed in the office of the clerk of the trial court on the second day of May, 1927. Brock was not brought to trial until the sixth day of July, 1927, or four days beyond the sixty days after the filing of the remittitur in the *571
office of the clerk of the court below. The defendant here was not brought to trial until the eighth day of July, 1927, or six days beyond the sixty days after the date of the filing of theremittitur below. So far as the facts are concerned, the only difference between the two cases is in the fact that Brock was brought to trial two days earlier than was O'Connor. This circumstance, it may be explained, was due to the fact that, as seen, the two defendants, although charged with the commission of the same two offenses of which they were adjudged guilty by the jury, were, for some reason, proceeded against by two separate and distinct informations, and were separately tried, and necessarily so under our law. (People v. O'Connor,
In view of the full examination of the record in the opinion in the Brock case disclosing the showing of "good cause" for the delay in bringing the two defendants to trial within the sixty-day period mentioned, we have now proceeded *573 herein in that particular as far as it is deemed necessary for the purposes of the decision herein.
Undoubtedly, the showing of "good cause" for the delay in bringing the defendant O'Connor to trial within the sixty-day period beginning with the filing with the clerk of the court below of the remittitur certifying to the reversal on the first appeal of the judgment and order, is such as to require this court, as in the Brock case, to leave the decision below on the motion to the discretion of the trial court. Indeed, we may rest the decision here on the decision in the Brock case, since upon the same record or the same facts the motion in each case was heard and determined. In the Brock case it is pertinently said: "Under these circumstances, as stated in the case of People v.Farrington,
The opinion cites a number of cases in which it is held, upon a showing of good cause for the delay no stronger than that presented herein and in the Brock case, that the trial court's denial of the motion represented a proper exercise of its discretion in such matters.
What has been said herein is not to be taken to imply an expression of an opinion by us upon the question whether the provision of section
The question should, of course, be definitely and definitively settled, in a proper case, but, as shown above, it is not necessary to pass definitely upon the proposition in this case, hence we do not undertake so to decide it here or intend the remarks made in this opinion respecting the question to be construed as reflecting the views of this court thereon.
For the reasons first hereinabove given, the judgment and the order appealed from are affirmed.
Finch, P.J., and Plummer, J., concurred.