98 Mo. 609 | Mo. | 1889
— At the September term, 1887, of the circuit court of Livingston county, the defendant was indicted for grand larceny, and on the third of October filed an application for a change of venue on the ground of prejudice of the inhabitants of said county against him, which, coming on to be heard, the defendant introduced evidence tending to show the existence of such prejudice, and the state introduced evidence tending to show that such prejudice did not exist so as to prevent his having a fair trial in said county. The court refused .to grant a change of venue.
Thereupon the defendant made application for a continuance of the cause until the next term on account of the absence of Daniel Gibbons and other witnesses. The court refused to continue the cause until the next term ; caused writs of attachment to be issued for the absent witnesses, and continued the case until the twenty-first day of November, 1887. On that day, the cause coming on to be heard, the witness Gibbons being still / absent, though in the meantime he had been arrested and brought into court and discharged on recognizance to appear on the twenty-first of November, a second attachment was issued against him, returnable forthwith and the cause passed until said attachment should be returned. On the next day the attachment was returned not served, and the said Gibbons still being absent, the defendant filed a second application for a continuance on account of the absence of said Gibbons,
I. The action of the trial court' upon an application for a change of venue in a criminal case on the ground of the prejudice of the inhabitants of the county against the defendant is final, unless it appears that there has been a palpable abuse of judicial discretion, and no such abuse appears from the evidence upon that issue in this case. State v. Hunt, 91 Mo. 490 ; State v. Holcomb, 86 Mo. 371 ; State v. Wilson, 85 Mo. 134.
II. The court committed no error in continuing the cause on the first application until the-twenty-first of November. But when its process, issued for the purpose of securing the presence of the witness Gibbons on that day, failed to bring him into court to testify on behalf of the defendant on that day, and its writ of attachment, then issued, failed to secure his attendance upon the following day, it committed error in refusing to grant him a continuance when he presented his second application therefor, based in part upon the absence of such witness, the sufficiency of which was conceded by the action of the prosecuting attorney in consenting that a statement of the facts which defendant proposed
III. Some other points are made against the action of the court on the trial of the cause. But as the subjects of some of them are not properly saved for review in this court, and others are not likely to occur in a future trial, and as the case, for the error of the trial court, in refusing the defendant a continuance must be remanded for a new trial, it will not be necessary to notice them.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded for new trial.