State v. Crucia
State v. Crucia
Opinion of the Court
The district attorney represents that the grand jury for the parish of Orleans returned an indictment charging Joseph Crucia with keeping a disorderly house, stating the nature of disorderly conduct in this house, at a designated place, on a certain day, in the city of New Orleans; that Crucia was arraigned and pleaded not guilty; that when the case was called for trial the judge, ex proprio motu, quashed the indictment and discharged the accused.
The district attorney then asked for a writ of prohibition against the district judge restraining him from quashing the indictment and for a writ of mandamus ordering him to proceed with the trial of the cause. The respondent judge has answered by sending up the record of the cause and saying that he was acting within his right as judge in quashing the indictment, because in a similar case (the Brooks Case, 83 South. 637),
Every litigant, including the state in criminal cases, is entitled to nothing more than the cold neutrality of an impartial judge. He, the judge, cannot take the.part of either side and refuse to hear a defendant who has been summoned for trial before him, and he must hear the state, or the representative of the state, in prosecuting the accused. It is the duty of the district attorney to investigate the truth of all criminal charges or accusations and to prosecute accused persons-
The point is considered and disposed of in the Brooks Case, this day decided, wherein a motion to quash a similar indictment was filed by defendant, and was sustained by the trial court.
Eor the foregoing reasons, and for the reasons in the Brooks Case, this day decided, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the respondent judge be prohibited from executing the judgment ordering the indictment against Joseph Orucia to be quashed and the discharge of the accused. It is further ordered that the case of State v. Orucia be reinstated on the docket of the court, and the trial thereof be proceeded with.
Ante, p. 325.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE v. CRUCIA
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Indictment and infobmation An indictment may be quashed on the application either of the defendant or the prosecutor. 2. Indictment and infobmation After the prisoner has pleaded to the general issue “not guilty,” no motion will lie to quash the indictment unless the plea is withdrawn, especially where he is present in court with his counsel refusing to withdraw his plea and demands a trial on the charge against him. 3. Indictment and information No indictment charging the higher offenses which affect the public at large, such as keeping a disorderly house, will be summarily set aside. 4. Criminal law In view of constitutional declaration that all courts shall be open and justice administered without denial, partiality, or unreasonable delay, the state, after filing a bill of indictment, has the right to be heard in prosecution of that charge, and accused has the right to appear in court to defend himself and to have counsel and cannot be deprived thereof, especially when present and protesting against action of trial judge in quashing the indictment. 5. Disorderly house An indictment charging that accused “did keep a disorderly house, that is to say, did keep a house at No. 342 North Rampart street open to the public and conducted in a manner to disturb the public peace and quiet of the neighborhood, in that lewd women openly congregated therein for the purpose of soliciting men for immoral sexual intercourse, and lewd women then and there did openly solicit men for immoral sexual intercourse,” charged an offense known to the law of Louisiana. O’Niell and Provosty, JJ., dissenting.