24 N.M. 16 | N.M. | 1918
OPINION OP THE COURT.
The appellant, Domingo Balles, was indicted for burglary in the district court for the county of Valencia. He was fdund guilty of that crime in the district court for the county of Bernalillo, and has perfected this appeal.
The evidence on the part of the state tended to disclose that the appellant and two companions went to the home of Romalo Romero in the early evening and brutally assaulted bim. They tied bim band and foot, placed a rope, around bis neck, eboked bim, stuck bim with a dagger, threatened his life by banging bim, and committed other brutal and cruel acts upon bim and bis wife, for the purpose of obtaining possession of a considerable sum of money which Romero was supposed to have concealed in his home. These facts were not disputed; the appellant’s defense consisting of an alibi.
“ * * * It being agreed between said respective counsel that it would be inconvenient and inexpedient to send said causes to either of the two remaining counties of the Seventh judicial' district, they have therefore agreed that, if the judge shall consent, which they respectfully request him to do, the venue in all of said causes may be changed to the county of Bernalillo on the filing of this agreement and the consent of the judge.”
Thereupon the venue of this cause was changed from Valencia county, in the Seventh - judicial district, to Bernalillo county, in the Second judicial district. Trial was had in the latter county, without any objection whatever on the part of the appellant as to the right of that court to hear and determine the case until after • verdict was returned finding appellant guilty. A motion in arrest of judgment was then made, wherein it was contended that the court trying the case'was without jurisdiction, and that is the first question presented here. The appellant contends that the territorial jurisdiction of the several district courts of the state is defined by the constitution, and that section 14 of article 2 of the state Constitution confers on accused persons the absolute right to a trial in the jurisdiction wherein the crime is alleged to have occurred. It is also argued by appellant’s counsel that the fact that appellant consented to be tried in a court in another district is immaterial, because jurisdiction cannot be conferred by consent. Reference is also made to sections 5570 and 5575, Code 1915, the first providing, in effect, that all criminal offenses shall be tried in the county in which they were committed, the second providing that, where change of venue is granted upon grounds other than those relating to the judge, the case shall be removed to some other county free from exception within the same judicial district.
While there is some conflict of authority as to the doctrines we shall announce under this first proposition, an examination of the cases convinces the court that the word “district” in section 14 of article 2 of the state constitution does not mean ‘ ‘ judicial district, ’ ’ but simply means territory over which a court may have jurisdiction ; that the right of a jury trial, as granted therein, constitutes a right or privilege which, in so far as the place of trial is concerned, may be waived by an accused person in a number of ways, and that, when he goes to trial in another judicial district, without objection on his part, he has waived the privilege, and cannot be heard to say that the court trying him was without jurisdiction. Thus in State v. Miller, 15 Minn. 344 (Gil. 277), the place of trial was changed from one county in one district to a county in a different district at the request of the state. The constitutional provision involved was the same as ours; the word district being «used. The court followed State v. Gut, 13 Minn. 343 (Gil. 315), holding that the Constitution was not violated by trial in another district; “district” being held to mean “trial district.” The most satisfactory case on the subject is that of Weyrich v. People, 89 Ill. 90. The court said:
“It is argued on behalf of plaintiff in error that the venue should have been changed either to Peoria, Marshall, Starlc, or Putnam counties, which are in the same judicial' circuit with Tazewell, and that changing to Logan county, which is in a different judicial circuit, was in violation of section 9, art. 2, of the Constitution, which provides that ‘in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right'to * * * a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the county or district in which the offense is alleged to have been committed.’ The objection is, in our opinion, based upon a misapprehension of the meaning of the word ‘district’ as here used. The plain object of this clause of the Constitution is to secure to the defendant the common-law right of trial by a jury of the visne or neighborhood where the offense is alleged to have been committed’, and to protect hirg^hgainst prosecution elsewhere. * * * A party is no more subject to be indicted and tried for the alleged commission of an offense in a different county in the same circuit than in a county in a different circuit. The creation of judicial circuits has not the slightest reference to the enforcement of this clause of the Constitution, but is solely for convenience in providing the requisite judicial force to administer the law throughout the state. The word ‘district’ is convertible with that of ‘county,’ and is descriptive of the territory which, in legal contemplation, comprises the visne over which the jurisdiction of the court for the purpose of prosecution for the commission of crimes and misdemeanors extends; and, although there may be many counties or districts in the same circuit, the court in each is entirely separate and disconnected from that in all of the others, and its jurisdiction, within the meaning of the clause under consideration, is limited by its territorial boundaries.”
In Olive v. State, 11 Neb. 1, 7 N. W. 444, the court said:
“In its ordinary meaning the word ‘district’ is commonly and properly used to designate any one of the various divisions or subdivisions in which the state is divided for political or other purposes, and may refer either to a congressional, judicial, senatorial, representative, school, or road district, depending always upon the connection in which it is used. In the clause quoted very clearly it refers to neither of these, and, although not synonymous' with the word ‘county,’ yet, by its connection with it, the intention evidently was that they should be taken in a similar sense, and as designating the precise portion of territory or division of the state over which a court, at any particular sitting, may exercise power in criminal matters. And- such division, by whatsoever name it may be known in legislation, is coextensive with and practically limited by this constitutional provision to that from which a jury * * * may legally he drawn. And' this is in entire accord with our constitutional system of district courts, by which one is designed for each organized county, having criminal jurisdiction coextensive therewith, and assisted by jurors drawn in the manner now provided by law from the whole body of the people thereof.”
To the same effect is State v. Knapp, 40 Kan. 148, 19 Pac. 728; In re Nelson, 19 S. D. 214, 102 N. W. 885, 887; State v. Stewart, 60 Wis. 587, 19 N. W. 429, 50 Am. Rep. 388, 394.
We agree with those courts holding that the word "district” cannot be considered as superfluous, aitd that, being used in conjunction with the word "county,” it means trial district. In this state trial districts of our district courts embrace the territory within a county' only, and until a different division is made the clause in question only means that the accused shall be tried by a jury of the county wherein the offense is alleged to have been committed, and does not mean that an accused-has any particular right to a trial by a jury from the’ judicial district wherein the crime was committed. Consequently the appellant was not vested with any right other than that of being tried by a jury from the county wherein the offense was alleged to have been committed, and, a fair and impartial jury not being procurable there, so far as the Constitution is concerned, he might be tried in some other county free from exception.
“By the statute the change of venue shall be to some adjacent county, if objections are not taken and sustained' to all the adjoining counties; and, if so, the change to be made to the nearest county to which there is no valid objection. While the defense might object to the removal of the cause in any other manner than that provided by the statute, we perceive no objection to the jurisdiction of the court to try the case in a county selected by the defense, and to which the attorney for the commonwealth consents. This class of cases is embraced within the jurisdiction of the circuit court. The judge of the district, upon hearing the objections pro and con, * * * can determine, from all the proof befoie him, to which of the adjacent counties the case is to be sent, and whether the objections to these counties, if made, are sufficient to send it to some other adjacent county, and surely, when the accused'desires to be tried in a particular county in the district, and no objection is made by the attorney for the state, there can be no question made as to the jurisdiction. The affidavits showing the necessity for a change of venue are not jurisdictional facts, and where a change of venue is granted, and the accused submits himself to the jurisdiction of the court to which it is sent, that is, goes into a trial without any objection, in either the court in which the indictment was found or the court to which the venue was changed, it is too late, after verdict, to raise the question for the first time. * * * Consent cannot give jurisdiction; but the purpose of the statute being to secure an impartial trial, and authorizing a removal of the cause by the accused from the vicinage, the spirit, if not the letter, of the statute will sustain a verdict of guilty or of an acquittal, where the accused selects the county in which he is to be tried, although it may not be in a county adjacent to that in which the offense was committed.”
In Territory v. Taylor, 11 N. M. 588, 596, 71 Pac. 489, 491, the court said:
“It comes with poor grace from the one who secured the change of venue to now assert t'hat the court to which the change was granted at his request had no power to try the case. The district courts hoth of Chavez and Eddy counties are courts of general jurisdiction; they are in the same judicial district, and are presided over by the same judge; besides, independent of the statute allowing a change of venue, it is the rule that one ‘who has applied for and obtained a change of venue cannot question the regularity of the proceedings.’ 4 Enc. P. & P. 489.”
To the same general effect are Oborn v. State, 143 Wis. 249,126 N. W. 737, 741, 31 L. R. A, (N. S.) 966; State v. Pancoast, 5 N. D. 516, 67 N. W. 1052, 1054, 35 L. R. A. 518; Hourigan v. Commonwealth, 94 Ky. 520, 23 S. W. 355. A case to the contrary, which practically stands alone on the subject, is Taylor v. State (Tex.) 197 S. W. 196.
For tlie reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court will be affirmed; and it is so ordered.