35 N.W.2d 647 | Iowa | 1949
The defendants, Donald and Billy Grimm, pleaded guilty to a county attorney's information which charged as follows:
"Comes now Dale Ewalt, as County Attorney of Warren County, State of Iowa, and in the name and by the authority of the State of Iowa, accuses Donald Grimm and Billy Grimm of the crime of Bank Robbery committed as follows:
"And charges that the said Donald Grimm and Billy Grimm, on or about the 6th day of January, A.D., 1948, in the County of Warren and State of Iowa, did rob the Norwalk-Cumming State Bank of Norwalk, Iowa, of the sum of Four Hundred Ninety Dollars in United States currency by holding up the employees thereof at the point of a gun; contrary to statute and against the peace and dignity of the State of Iowa."
When the defendant Billy Grimm first pleaded guilty on January 7, 1948, he was interrogated by the court. He said he had read and fully understood the indictment and that he desired to plead guilty. After his plea the court continued his case for five days and then said to defendant: "I think the court should inform you at this time that on an offense of this kind, either on a plea of guilty or upon conviction, that the penalty is mandatory life imprisonment in the penitentiary." Section *473
On this same day the court appointed defendants' present counsel to represent them and Billy Grimm was brought back to the courtroom and the attorney asked leave to withdraw Billy Grimm's plea of guilty, stating, in the course of his request for withdrawal, "this is a charge on which a plea of guilty would require a life imprisonment."
There was attached to the information the minutes of testimony of two employees of the bank to the effect that on January 6 at 3:45 p.m. they were working in the bank when the defendant Billy Grimm came into the bank and drew a pistol and pointed it at them and demanded the money be turned over to them. The minutes also show that other witnesses would testify they talked with defendants the night of January 6 and they admitted the robbery of the bank and told the prospective witnesses that Billy entered the bank with the gun with intent to rob the bank while Donald waited outside in the car and after Billy held up the employees he backed out of the bank with the money, keeping his gun pointed at the teller's cage, and got into the car where Donald was waiting and they then drove away.
On January 10, 1948, the defendants, through their appointed counsel, entered a plea of guilty as charged but before sentence the attorney argued to the trial court that the information charged the defendants with the crime of robbery only and did not charge defendants with entering a bank with intent to rob in violation of section
"If any person shall enter or attempt to enter the premises of a bank or trust company or banking association, with intent to hold up and rob any bank or trust company or any banking association, or any person or persons therein, or thought to be *474 therein, of any money or currency or silver or gold or nickels or pennies or of anything of value belonging to said bank or trust company or banking association, or from any person or persons therein; or shall intimidate, injure, wound, or maim any person therein with intent to commit such holdup or `stick-up' or robbery, he shall, upon conviction thereof, be imprisoned in the penitentiary at hard labor for life, or for any term not less than ten years."
Section 773.3, Code, 1946, provides that an indictment (or information) is valid and sufficient if it uses the "name given to the offense by statute" or if "it charges the offense * * * by stating so much of the definition of the offense * * * in terms * * * of the statute defining the offense, or in terms of substantially the same meaning, as is sufficient to give the court and the accused notice of what offense is intended to be charged."
Of course it is abundantly clear from this record that the crime "intended" to be charged was a violation of section
I. With respect to the first argument as to the name given the offense defendants point out that the statutory name in the Code is "Entering bank with intent to rob" and the name given the offense in the information is "bank robbery." Section
II. Defendants' entire argument that the information is insufficient in that it fails to define the offense in terms of the statute or in terms of substantially the same meaning, sufficient to give notice of what offense is intended, is based upon their interpretation that section
[3] Defendants' argument as to the insufficiency of the information is, as stated, based upon their interpretation of section
[4] No point can be made that the information charges that *477 employees were held up and the statute speaks of "any person therein." Such allegations are particulars of an offense. The word "bank" as used in the statute and information means premises, banking room, or bank buildings, as well as the corporate person. It would be the purest quibble to say the indictment is insufficient because it fails to state the bank employees were in the bank at the time they were held up at the point of a gun and the bank robbed. As stated, such allegations are particulars of the offense. Defendants could have made a motion for a bill of particulars under section 773.5, Code, 1946, but of course no such motion would have been granted under the record in this case because "the indictment [information] together with the minutes of the evidence" (section 773.5, Code, 1946) place the employees, who were held up at the point of a gun, in the bank.
We come now to the question as to whether the information charges the employees were "intimidated", and we will substitute "held up" by defendants with intent to rob the bank. The overt act charged in the information is the robbery of the bank by holding up the employees. The overt act described in the statute as here applicable is the holding up of the employees with intent to rob the bank. Obviously there could be no robbery of a bank by holding up the employees without a holding up of the employees with intent to commit a robbery of the bank. There was at least the indirect averment that bank employees were held up with an intent on the part of defendants to rob the bank. Indirect averments are sufficient after verdict. Neufield v. United States, 73 App. D.C. 174, 118 F.2d 375. See also 42 C.J.S., Indictments and Informations, section 319.
[5] We must admit a charge of holding up the employees in a bank with intent to rob the bank would be sufficient under the statute. Here the information merely goes further and alleges the robbery was consummated. The charge that the bank was robbed by means of holding up the employees includes the overt act condemned in the statute of holding up the employees with intent to rob the bank.
Somewhat the same situation was present in United States v. Spain, D.C. Ill.,
So, too, it can be said in this case, robbery of a bank by means of holding up the employees is more than holding up the employees therein with intent to rob the bank. It includes the latter and in addition charges the consummation of the robbery.
We said in State v. Bading,
MANTZ, C.J., and HALE, BLISS, OLIVER, SMITH, and HAYS, JJ., concur.