State v. Pottinger
Decision Date | 12 March 1956 |
Docket Number | No. 44611,No. 2,44611,2 |
Citation | 287 S.W.2d 782,365 Mo. 794 |
Parties | STATE of Missouri, Appellant, v. Hardy POTTINGER, Respondent |
Court | Missouri Supreme Court |
John M. Dalton, Atty. Gen., Donal D. Guffey, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellant.
Joslyn & Joslyn, L. D. Joslyn, T. B. Russell, Charleston, for respondent.
Hardy Pottinger (herein called defendant) was prosecuted in the Circuit Court of Mississippi County for the felony of obtaining money under false pretenses. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, and fixed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of two years. On the same day the court, acting on its own motion, ordered that this verdict be set aside (on the ground that the court should have sustained defendant's motions for a judgment of acquittal offered at the close of the state's case in chief, and at the close of all of the evidence), and entered in defendant's favor a judgment of acquittal, from which order and judgment the state prosecutes this appeal.
The action of which the state complains is more fully reflected in those portions of the record of the trial subsequent to the coming in of the verdict, as follows:
'Whereupon, the court orders the clerk to enter and file the verdict aforesaid.
'It is therefore considered, ordered and adjudged by the Court that the defendant go hence without day, fully acquitted and discharged; and that he recover of the State of Missouri his costs in this behalf expended and incurred, and that a bill of said costs be certified to the State Auditor for allowance and payment.'
Contending that neither the statutes or the rules of criminal procedure contemplate or permit an appeal by the state from such an order and judgment, defendant filed in this court his motion to dismiss the state's appeal, which was ordered taken with the case. We proceed, then, to a determination of the question raised by the motion.
42 V.A.M.S. Supreme Court Rules, rule 28.04, governing appeals by the state, provides as follows:
'The state shall be entitled to take an appeal in the following cases and in no others:
'(a) when, prior to judgment, upon motion or upon the court's own view, it is adjudged that an indictment or information is insufficient;
'(b) when a judgment is arrested or set aside.'
Rule 27.22 specifies the grounds upon which the court may arrest or set aside a judgment, as follows:
'The court may, of its own initiative, arrest or set aside the judgment before the transcript of the record is filed in the appellate court if an appeal be taken, and in any event not later than thirty days after entry thereof, upon either of the following grounds:
'(1) that the facts stated in the indictment or information do not constitute an offense, or
The statute this rule was intended to supplant is Section 547.050 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. Obviously, the court did not base its action upon the authority conferred by Rule 27.22 or Sec. 547.050, because insufficiency of the evidence is not comprehended within the terms of either as a ground for arresting or setting aside a judgment in a criminal case.
It is to be borne in mind that there is no provision in the rules of criminal procedure corresponding to Sec. 510.290 ( ) to the effect that if a motion for a directed verdict is denied or for any reason is not granted, the court is deemed to have submitted the case to the jury subject to a later determination of the legal question raised by the motion, and further providing that a party who has moved for a directed verdict may within ten days move to have the verdict set aside, and to have judgment entered in accordance with the motion for a directed verdict. In such respect, the procedure prevailing in the two types of cases is wholly unlike.
In any view that may be taken of the court's action, it is certain that there was no warrant in law for entering a judgment discharging the prisoner at the stage of the proceedings indicated. This is true even if it be conceded that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the charge, but we do not reach the merits of the latter question because of the disposition we find it necessary to make of the defendant's motion to dismiss.
In support of its right to appeal in the case at bar, the state invokes paragraph (b) of Rule 28.04, contending that the action of the trial court in setting aside the verdict and entering a judgment of acquittal 'constitutes an arrest of judgment.' Taken literally, the terms of that paragraph may lend color to the state's view. But it is to be remembered that this rule was established pursuant to the rule-making power conferred on the Supreme Court by Art. V, Sec. 5, Const. of Missouri, V.A.M.S. Limitations upon the exercise of that power are thus enumerated in the section just mentioned: 'The rules shall not change substantive rights,...
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