210 P. 1011 | Idaho | 1922
On April 27, 1922, indictments were filed in the district court of the eleventh judicial district for Cassia county charging petitioners with certain felonies under the banking laws of this state, and petitioners have applied to this court for a writ of prohibition commanding Honorable B. S. Varian, the district judge presiding in said county at the time of the return of said indictments, to desist and refrain from any further proceedings under said indictments. Petitioners in their brief filed in this court present the following four points upon which they rest their claim to the relief sought, but discuss only the first, second and fourth:
1. The grand jury was not legally constituted because the Cassia county court was not in session;
2. The grand jury was not legally constituted because of the substitution on April 26th of Alfred Crane for Emil J. Henzel;
4. Prohibition is the proper remedy in the matter. ■
Petitioners rest their contention that the grand jury was not regularly constituted because the Cassia county court was not in session upon the following facts: In December, 1921, the judges of the eleventh judicial district made an order fixing the terms of court in said district for the year 1922 as follows:
Twin Falls County: January 9th, February 20th, April 10th, May 15th, September 11th, November 11th;
Cassia County: February 20th, May 15th, November 13th; Minidoka County: March 20th, September 11th; Jerome County: April 3d, October 9th.
On March 20, 1922, Honorable T. Bailey Lee, one of the judges of said district, postponed the opening of the Minidoka county term from March 20th to March 30th, and then from March 30th to April 5th. The Cassia county term appears to have been opened by Judge Lee on February 20th, and to have continued without question up to and including April 3, 1922, the date upon which the grand jury was impaneled which returned the indictments involved in this case. On April 5th, the grand jury having been impaneled and sworn and duly charged,by the court, Judge Lee opened a term of court at Rupert, in Minidoka county, pursuant to the orders theretofore made by him. The term at Rupert proceeded in the usual way, cases being called and tried by him up to and including the 29th day of April. In the meantime the grand jury in Cassia county remained in session until the 23d day of April, 1922, when with all the members present, they voted to return the indictments involved in this proceeding. On April 26th, Emil J. Henzel one of the grand jurors, was excused by Judge Lee on
No order was made by Judge Lee adjourning the term of the court in Cassia county, but it is the contention of petitioners that the necessary legal effect of his opening the term in Minidoka county was to adjourn the Cassia county term. If this contention of petitioners is correct then it is not open to question that the grand jury had no legal existence at the time of finding and returning these indictments. Following the provision of our statute regarding the impaneling and swearing of grand juries and the court’s charge to them our statute provides:
“ C. S., sec. 8784: The grand jury must then retire to a private room and inquire into the offenses cognizable by them. On the completion of the business before them, they must be discharged by the court, but, whether the business is completed or not, they are discharged by the final adjournment of the court.”
It seems clear that Judge Lee had not only no intention to adjourn the term at Burley when he opened court at Rupert, but that his intention was not to adjourn it, but to take a recess while the grand jury were prosecuting their investigations. After the grand jury had been impaneled, sworn and charged by him as required by law the court had no duty laid upon him except to be ready to give advice in case it should be requested, or to receive a report from the grand
C. S., sec. 6458, reads as follows: “At least two terms of the district court must be held in each county each year, and each term must be held until business is disposed of. If a judge of said court deems it necessary, in order to dispose of business, to hold a term beyond the date set for the commencement of another term in the same district, he may, by order so do and postpone the other term to a future date. When there is more than one judge in any district, or when another judge is called into the district, any or all of said judges may hold court at the same time in the same county or may hold terms concurrently in the different counties of the district.”
While the plan of procedure outlined in this section was the one undoubtedly intended by the legislature to be followed in avoiding conflict between terms of court in two or
“R. C., see. 3831 (C. S., sec. 6458). At least two terms of the district court must be held in each organized county of the state, and each term must be held until the business is disposed of, or until a day fixed for the commencement of some other term in the district.”
Under this section as it was prior to amendment the contention of petitioners might be upheld, but as the section now stands we are unwilling to so hold, and our view in this respect is supported by ample authority as well as by sound reason.
C. S., sec. 6459 reads as follows: “The court may adjourn from time to time during the term, and may, when the public convenience requires, adjourn the term over the time fixed by law for the commencement of another term in the same district. ’ ’
Under this section the court had authority to take a recess, as it appears to have done in this case, and such recess would not be equivalent to a final adjournment of the term. In support of this view the following authorities are in point: Ex parte Harrell, 57 Or. 95, 110 Pac. 493; Tucker v. State, 10 Okl. Or. 565, 139 Pac. 998; 15 C. J. 881, 883.
This view is also supported by the following authorities: Com. v. Bannon, 97 Mass. 214; Terr. v. Armijo, 14 N. M. 205, 89 Pac. 267; Terr. v. Barela, 15 N. M. 520, 110 Pac. 845; Brown v. State, 11 Okl. Cr. App. 498, 148 Pac. 181; Jones v. McClaughry, 169 Iowa, 281, 151 N. W. 210; Bidwell v. Love, 22 Okl. 549, 98 Pac. 425; Stirling v. Wagner, 4 Wyo. 5, 31 Pac. 1032, 32 Pac. 1128; Carland v. Custer County, 5 Mont. 579, 6 Pac. 24-29; People ex rel. Pickard v. Sheriff, 11 N. Y. Civ. Proc. Rep. 172, 184; Nealon v. People, 39 Ill. App. 481; Badders v. United States, 240 U. S. 391, 36 Sup. Ct. 367, 60 L. ed. 706; Jones v. United States, 162 Fed. 417, 421, 89 C. C. A. 303.
The third -point mentioned by petitioners is not discussed in the brief, from which we infer that it is not seriously
It is not necessary to determine whether the fourth point can be sustained since, if prohibition is the proper remedy, petitioners have not brought themselves within the statute providing for this writ.
The peremptory writ applied for is denied and the alternative writ is quashed.