STATE OF NEBRASKA, APPELLEE, V. HUBERT R. ETCHISON, APPELLANT.
No. 38903.
Supreme Court of Nebraska
October 19, 1973
211 N. W. 2d 405
The judgment and sentence of the District Court are correct and are affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Riedmann, Welsh & Jeffries, for appellant.
Clarence A. H. Meyer, Attorney General, and Betsy G. Berger, for appellee.
Heаrd before WHITE, C. J., SPENCER, BOSLAUGH, SMITH, MCCOWN, NEWTON, and CLINTON, JJ.
Defendant, Hubert R. Etchison, was found guilty of fleeing in a motor vehicle in an effort to avoid arrest, and was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment in the Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex. We affirm.
The information filed against defendant on April 5, 1972, contained two counts: Count I charged operation of a motor vehicle while under the influеnce of alcoholic liquor; and count II charged the offense upon which defendant was convicted and sentenced herein by the District Court for Sarpy County.
Defendant was arrested on December 13, 1971, and charged in county court with drunken driving and motor vehicle flight to avoid arrest. He was found guilty on the first count, sentenced to 30 days in jail, and bound over to thе District Court on the second count. Defendant failed to perfect an appeal from his conviction for driving while intoxicated. When he appeared for trial in the District Court on October 4, 1972, the judge struck count I of the information upon which defendant had already been tried and convicted, and remanded him to the custody of the sheriff to carry out the sentence imposed by the county judge. Defendant waived his right to a jury trial on the remaining count and was tried by the court on October 19 and 20, 1972.
The evidence would indicate that dеfendant‘s automobile was observed by the occupants of a Sarpy county sheriff‘s patrol car heading west on State Highway No. 370 at a high rate of speed. They pursued and stopped it and informed defendant that he was under arrest for drunken driving. Defendant then pulled away from the scene and a chase ensued through the Golden Hills area of Sarpy county, then easterly on highway No. 370, and finally northerly on U. S. Highway Nos. 73-75, where, with the assistance of two Bellevue police cruisers, defendant was stopped.
Defendant makes three assignments of error: First, the court erred in failing to quash the information for
Under section
Although the information was filed herein on April 5, 1972, trial did not commence until October 19, 1972. Defendant was represented by counsel during this period. A plea of not guilty was entered on behalf of the defendant by the court on September 8, 1972. Defendant‘s motion to quash was not made until October 19, 1972, the first day of the trial, and it was denied by the court on that dаte. The motion to quash was filed without leave of court while the plea of not guilty was upon the record. Defendant at no time requested leave of the court to withdraw thе plea to the general issue. Under such circumstances, the motion to quash was properly denied. Even if defendant had timely filed his motion there would remain serious questions concerning whether it sufficiently raises the particular objections argued in the brief. These are points we need not decide.
Defendant, in his second assignment of error, contends
Defendant next attacks the statute as contravening the state and federаl constitutional provisions against cruel and unusual punishment. These constitutional provisions were intended to prohibit torture and agonizing punishment, and do not abridge the power оf the Legislature to select such penalties as it deems most effective in the suppression of crime. State v. Tucker (1968), 183 Neb. 577, 162 N. W. 2d 774. The fixing of criminal penalties is primarily a legislative function and cоurts will not interfere except in those cases where the punishment is so far excessive as to shock the sense of mankind. McMahon v. State (1904), 70 Neb. 722, 97 N. W. 1035. The maximum imprisonment provided by this statute is not less than 1 year nor more than 3 years in the Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex. We hold that this does not constitute cruel or unusual punishment.
The penal provisions of section
At the time of the occurrence of this offense the defendant had on appeal to this court his conviction for failing to stop after being involved in an accident resulting in personal injuries. There, we set aside the sentence and remanded the cause to the trial court with instructions to place the defendant on probation. See State v. Etchison (1972), 188 Neb. 134, 195 N. W. 2d 498. Under the circumstances of the present case, we cannot say that the sentence imposed is an abuse of discretion.
The judgment is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
MCCOWN, J., dissenting as to sentence.
This is another case in which it might well be said that the punishment does not fit the crime, although it may well fit the defendant! Eighteen months in the penitentiary for fleeing to avoid arrest for driving while under the influence of alcoholic liquor is in sharp contrast with the 30 days in jail which the defendant received on the conviction for the original offense itself. There is no showing as to any other traffic charges filed or the penalties received as a result of the facts involved in this case. The record revеals that the defendant had been previously convicted for a traffic offense of a different kind which was also a felony for
The attention of the Legislature ought to be drawn to the provisions of section
