State Ex Rel. Fletcher v. District Court

[1] On September 18, 1930, some 36 county attorneys' informations against defendants numbering in all 26 were filed in the Jefferson District Court, each in two counts against two to four defendants, charging conspiracy and false pretenses. Later an indictment was returned in another case against three of the same defendants also charging conspiracy and false pretenses. One of the cases went to trial resulting in a verdict for defendants. Thereupon the State asked for a change of place of trial in each of the remaining cases "for the reason that the State cannot receive a fair and impartial trial in Jefferson county, Iowa, owing to excitement and prejudice in said county against the prosecution as appears in the affidavit of Otto J. Eckey, Ralph H. Munro and John J. Hess, prosecuting attorneys for the State attached hereto * * *." The affidavit states: *Page 824

"That the charge made in the above entitled case is a felony and the defendants therein are residents of Jefferson county, Iowa; that owing to excitement and prejudice in said Jefferson county against the State these affiants verily believe that a fair and impartial trial of the above entitled case cannot be had in said Jefferson county, Iowa; that said case is one of a series of some 30 cases all against persons living in and near Jefferson county, Iowa, and these affiants verily believe that because of the excitement and prejudice and the fact that one of said cases has already been tried in said community and said trial was largely attended by persons living in Jefferson county, and vicinity the State can only procure a fair and impartial trial by having said cause removed to some county in the district where such condition does not exist and these affiants verily believe that a like condition because of the residence of certain of the defendants* * *."

Defendants filed resistance on the ground that the statute providing for a change of venue on application of the State is in violation of Section 9, Article 1, of the Constitution, and on the further ground that "practically all of the defendants, the witnesses and the attorneys engaged in said causes are residents of Jefferson county, Iowa, and the transfer of said causes to some other county for trial would work a hardship * * * 3 * * * a fair and impartial trial can be had by the State in each and all of said causes in Jefferson county, Iowa, and for the reason that there is no prejudice or excitement against the State of Iowa in Jefferson county, Iowa, which would in any manner prevent the State from obtaining a fair and impartial trial of each and all of said cases in said county, all of which is evidenced by the affidavits of residents of said county hereto attached * * *." The affidavit of Ernest Aronson set out in the return in support of the resistance states:

"That I am a resident of Lockridge Township in Jefferson county, Iowa, and I have resided in said Township in said County for more than the 30 years last past. That I am the assessor for my Township and within the past three or four months have talked with a majority of the people living within my Township. That I am well acquainted with the sentiment of the people in my community relative to the so-called cattle cases in *Page 825 which the State of Iowa is plaintiff and the following named persons (naming the 26 defendants) * * * are defendants. That there is no prejudice or excitement against the State of Iowa in the community in which I reside which would in any manner prevent the State from obtaining a fair and impartial trial of each and all of said cases in Jefferson county, Iowa."

The return recites: "Separate affidavits similar to the affidavit of Ernest Aronson as set out above were filed as follows: (Here follows a list of 765 names giving the township of residence and years of residence of each affiant.) The State filed supporting affidavits stating:

"We the undersigned residents of Jefferson county, Iowa, * * * on oath say that owing to excitement and prejudice in Jefferson county, Iowa, against the state and in favor of the numerous defendants in the cases now commonly known as the cattle cases, being cases entitled The State of Iowa v. A.L. Neuhart, and others including some twenty-six different defendants residing in this and adjoining counties; because of the fact that the largely attended trial in the case of State v. John B. Stever, recently tried in this county, and because of the publicity given said trial by public attendance at said trial, and newspaper publication given same, and because of the large number of defendants and their associates and relatives in this county, we verily believe that a fair and impartial trial of the said cases or any of them can not be had in Jefferson county, Iowa, and we believe that justice can more nearly be obtained by change of place of trial to some other county in which such condition does not exist."

Here follow the signatures of the affiants with their occupation and address — some 360 in number. The total number of affiants on both sides, exclusive of the state's attorneys, is therefore 1123. The District Court did not pass on the constitutional question but ruled that the state's showing in the light of the resistance was insufficient to satisfy him that there was any excitement or prejudice against the state that would prevent the state from having a fair and impartial trial in Jefferson county.

The respondents, not waiving their claim of unconstitutionality of the statute which gives to the State the right to petition for change of place of trial, base their resistance to the proceeding *Page 826 here mainly on the contention that the trial court in denying the State's application for change was in the proper exercise of its discretion and that its action is not open to review on certiorari.

Respondents argue:

"The abuse of discretion to justify interference with the exercise of discretionary power implies not merely the error of judgment, but perversity of will, passion, prejudice, partiality or moral delinquency. Citizens Co. v. Heath, 62 N.E. 107; Stewart v. Stewart, 62 N.E. 1023-1025; People v. R.R. Co., 29 N.Y. 418; Sharon v. Sharon, 16 P. 345; 1 Words and Phrases 49 and cases there cited."

Chapter 221, 40th G.A., extended to the State the right to petition for change of venue. The statute provides (Code, 1927, Section 13813):

"Such petition, when filed by the state, shall set forth the nature of the prosecution, the court where the same is pending, and that the state cannot receive a fair and impartial trial in said county owing to excitement or prejudice in such county against the prosecution, and be verified on information and belief by the affidavit of the county attorney or his assistant."

"13815. The petition need not state the facts upon which the belief of the petitioner or other person verifying the same is founded, but may allege the belief of the particular ground thereof in general terms."

"13816. When the alleged ground in the petition is excitement or prejudice in the county against the petitioner, the court may receive additional testimony by affidavits only, either on the part of the defendant or the state."

"13818. The court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, must, when fully advised, decide the matter of the petition according to the very right of it."

[2] I. By our Constitution, "The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial * * *" (Article 3, Section 1.) The legislative authority of the state is vested in the General Assembly. The supreme executive power of the state is vested in the Governor, and the judicial power is "vested *Page 827 in a Supreme Court, district courts, and such other courts inferior to the Supreme Court as the General Assembly may * * * establish." Article 5, Section 1. All of the powers of government of the state (except so far as they may be specially reserved by the Constitution or may have been delegated to the Federal Government) are vested in these three departments. The definition of crime and the procedure for its punishment are legislative.

Section 9, Article 1, of the Constitution provides:

"The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate; * * * but no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law."

At common law, "the grand jury are sworn to inquire only for the body of the county." In general, at common law all offenses must be inquired into as well as tried in the county where the fact is committed. 4 Blackstone Commentaries *303, et seq.; 2 Hawkins' P.C. (6th Ed.) 314, et seq.

"The inconvenience" of this rule was in numerous cases "remedied by" statute. Id.

"And there are to be found in the statute book a variety of specific exceptions from the principle that an offender must be tried in the county in which the offense is committed; which have been introduced, from time to time, to prevent the failure of justice, or to promote its convenient administration * * *." 4 Stephen's Com. (15th Ed.) 299.

There were instances even at common law where the fact occurring in part in one county indictment might be found in another. Id.

Certiorari might "be had at any time before trial, to certify and remove the indictment * * * for one of these four purposes * * * 2. Where it is surmised that a partial or insufficient trial will probably be had in the court below, the indictment is removed, in order to have the prisoner or defendant tried at the bar of the court of King's Bench, * * * or before the justices ofnisi prius." 4 Blackstone Com. *320; 4 Broom and Hadley's Com. (Ed. 1869) 418; 3 Stephen's Com. (15th Ed.) 350, 660; 4 Id. 320, 374, 375; 2 Hawkins' P.C. (6th Ed.) 405; Carter's History of English Courts (5th Ed.) 55, 57; *Page 828 Ridges' Constitutional Law of England, 188; Id. (3rd Ed.) 232.

Though on trial before the King's Bench the defendant was ordinarily entitled to a jury of the county out of which the indictment was brought (4 Blackstone Com. *265) yet when applied for by the attorney general or in behalf of the King the writ of certiorari issued as matter of course. 4 Stephen's Com. (15th Ed.) 320; Barry v. Traux, 99 N.W. 769, 774, 13 N.D. 131, 65 L.R.A. 762, 112 Am. St. Reports 662; State v. New Jersey Jockey Club, 19 Atl. (N.J.) 976; Duggen v. McGruder, 12 Am. Dec. 527, 528, 1 Miss. (Walker) 112; State v. Dobson, 36 S.W. (Mo.) 238, 243.

The right of the crown to a change seems to have been well settled. See cases cited in Barry v. Traux, 99 N.W. 769, 774,13 N.D. 131, 65 L.R.A. 762, 112 Am. St. Reports 662.

It is obvious that the venue of criminal cases was, in England and is in Iowa, a matter of statutory regulation. The General Assembly possesses the legislative power of the state, except so far as the same is withheld from it by the constitution. Neither by express provision nor by implication is the power to regulate the venue of criminal prosecutions withheld from the General Assembly. Though precedents from other states are not uniform (see 16 C.J. 202), we think that the act granting to the state the right to a change of place of trial is not inimical to Section 9, Article 1, of the Constitution. State v. Pugsley,75 Iowa 742; Barry v. Traux, 99 N.W. 769, 774, 13 N.D. 131, 65 L.R.A. 762, 112 Am. St. Reports 662; People v. Peterson, 52 N.W. (Mich.) 1039.

[3] II. The State at the hearing in this Court offered in evidence the transcript of the evidence taken upon the trial of the defendants who were acquitted. Defendants objected to the offer. This proceeding is an original one in this Court, and evidence offered in this Court may be received. Code, 1927, Section 12464. The proper authorities of the State have filed informations and indictment against the defendants charging them with the commission of public offenses. The regularity and sufficiency of the informations and indictment are not questioned. It would be wholly outside the province of this Court to undertake to consider the probability of defendants' innocence or guilt. The offer of the transcript for that purpose would be improper. Consideration *Page 829 of the transcript however is proper for the purpose of ascertaining the circumstances and nature of the acts charged.

[4] III. Up to the time of the passage of Chapter 221, 40th G.A., the state had no right to apply for change of place of trial. Quite likely the Fortieth General Assembly had heard rumblings of local "rebellions" or of hostility to enforcement and consequent defiance of such laws of the state as might not be locally popular. Anyhow, the legislature recognized the validity of the proposition that the state if unable to receive a fair and impartial trial ought equally with the defendant to have the right to a change and that its inability under the existing law to obtain a change was an evil. By Chapter 221 the legislature undertook to correct this evil by enacting:

"In all criminal cases which may be pending in any of the district courts, any defendant therein, or the state, in cases where defendant is charged with felony, may petition the court for a change of place of trial to another county."

The same statute gives the same right to either party. The duty of the court in acting on the application is the same whichever party is applicant. That particular statute does not provide for a review either in behalf of the state or in behalf of defendant. That the defendant, if the application is made unsuccessfully by him, has not the right of review if the trial court does not exercise sound discretion and does not decide the matter according to the very right of it is unthinkable.

Were conditions reversed, were defendants nonresidents and the prosecuting witnesses residents of Jefferson county and had one of the cases been tried and defendants therein convicted and had they thereupon filed motion and supporting affidavits corresponding to those which the state has here filed, and had the state filed such a showing as defendants have here filed and had defendants' application been denied, defendants in the event of conviction would have been entitled to a new trial for abuse of discretion in denying the change. State v. Nash, 7 Iowa 347; State v. Mooney, 10 Iowa 506; State v. Canada, 48 Iowa 448; State v. Billings, 77 Iowa 417; State v. Crafton, 89 Iowa 109; State v. Meyer, 181 Iowa 440.

In State v. Crafton, 89 Iowa 109, 115, it is said: *Page 830

"Each case must depend upon its own peculiar facts and circumstances. We know how difficult it is for an appellate court to see these matters as they may have appeared to the trial judge, and hence it becomes us to be exceedingly careful in passing upon the question of the proper exercise of the discretion vested in the trial court. When, after due investigation, we are satisfied that the trial court has made a mistake, it is our duty to rectify it as far as possible. The language of this court in the case of State v. Nash, supra, is applicable in this case. It was there said: `It is important, to maintain the usefulness of our judicial system, that no suspicion of influence from popular excitement in the administration of the law should be allowed to impair the public confidence in the fairness and impartiality of judicial proceedings. An excited state of public feeling and opinion is always the most unfavorable for the investigation of the truth. Not only should the mind of the juror be wholly without bias and prejudice, it should not only be free from all undue feeling and excitement in itself, but it should be, as far as possible, removed from the influence of prejudice and feeling and excitement in others.' A man charged with the commission of the grave crime of murder has a right to be tried by an impartial jury, and in a community where his case has not been prejudiced and prejudged."

Two questions are presented: 1. Whether the district court merely erred in the exercise of its discretion, or whether it abused the sound discretion and its duty to decide the matter "according to the very right of it," which the law required. 2. If so, whether for such abuse of discretion the state has a remedy by either the statutory or common law writ of certiorari. We consider the two questions together.

Arbitrary action or discretion is excluded by the mandatory terms of the statute, which are that: "The court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, must, when fully advised, decide the matter of the petition according to the very right of it." The discretion is to be "a sound discretion." The court must act not hastily or inadvisedly but "when fully advised." When the court is fully advised he must "decide the matter of the petition according to the very right of it." Even without this cautionary and mandatory language the term "abuse of discretion" *Page 831 does not imply a bad motive, or a wrongful purpose or perversity, passion, prejudice, partiality, moral delinquency, willful misconduct or intentional wrong. We shall not undertake to formulate a general definition of the term "abuse of discretion." It does not imply reproach. State v. Robinson, 98 S.E. (S.C.) 329.

If the reasons given by the court for its action are clearly untenable or unreasonable, if its action clearly amounts to a denial of justice, if clearly against justice or conscience, reason and evidence it has abused its discretion. Id. State v. Mooney, 10 Iowa 506, and other cases supra and post. Schiltz v. Lowell, Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 119 Atl. (Vt.) 513; Bringhurst v. Harkins, 2 W.W. Harr. (Del.) 324, 122 A. 783; Root v. Bingham, 128 N.W. 132, 26 S.D. 118; Seaba v. State, 290 Pac. (Okla.) 1098, 1100.

Discretion does not mean the arbitrary will or merely individual or personal view of the judge. State v. Canada,48 Iowa 448, 450; Arthaud v. Griffin, 205 Iowa 141, 144.

The defendant has an efficient remedy after conviction by appeal. The state, however, after defendant has been put in jeopardy has none. By another statute the legislature has provided generally for review and annulment of the action of an inferior court in exceeding his proper jurisdiction or "otherwise acting illegally" when there is no other plain, speedy or adequate remedy. Code, 1927, Chapter 533. At common law the court of transcendent and of supervisory and revisory jurisdiction (the court of King's Bench) might issue the prerogative writ of certiorari, the object of which was to remove before or after judgment the proceedings pending in an inferior court into the court of King's Bench. 3 Stephen's Com. (15th Ed.) 350, 660; 4 Id. 320, 321, 374, 375; Ridges' Constitutional Law (3rd Ed.) 490; 4 Broom Hadley's Com. (Ed. 1869) 418; 2 Hawkins' P.C. (6th Ed.) 405.

"An abuse of judicial discretion has always been, and always ought to be, the subject of review in some form." Meyer v. Cullen, 54 N.Y. 392, 397.

See, also, State v. Mooney, 10 Iowa 506, 511-12.

When on the undisputed facts the court exceeds its discretion, or takes action contrary to its mandatory duty, the party *Page 832 aggrieved, in the absence of other adequate remedy, is entitled to annulment on the statutory writ of certiorari. Davis v. District Court, 195 Iowa 688, 692; Chicago, B. Q. Railway Co. v. Castle, 155 Iowa 124, 131; State v. District Court, 189 Iowa 1167, 1171; Dempsey v. Alber, 212 Iowa 1134; Shearer v. Sayre,207 Iowa 203.

In the analogous case of mandamus though the writ will not be allowed for the correction of mere error in exercising discretion yet where discretion is not exercised in accordance with established rules of law but is abused the wrong will be corrected on mandamus. Harwood v. Quinby, 44 Iowa 385, 393; 38 C.J. 598.

The petition whether made by the state or defendant "need not state the facts upon which the belief of the petitioner or other person verifying the same is founded, but may allege the belief of the particular ground thereof in general terms." Section 13815. But the court "may receive additional testimony by affidavits only, either on the part of the defendant or the state." Section 13816.

The application in the form prescribed and in conformity to the requirements of the statute and on its face is proper and sufficient. It made out a prima facie case, which if uncontroverted entitled the applicant to the change. Id. State v. Mooney, 10 Iowa 506, 511; State v. Arnold, 12 Iowa 479, 482; State v. Nash, 7 Iowa 347, 372; State v. Crafton, 89 Iowa 109, 113.

The general rule is that in the absence of statute facts must be stated both in the application and in the resistance. 16 C.J. 212, 213; People v. Yoakum, 53 Cal. 566; People v. McCauley,1 Cal. 379, 383; Territory v. Egan, 13 N.W. (Dak.) 568.

If the case had not been discussed, if opinions had not been formed or expressed, if defendants were not men of importance or influence, if they had not associates or relatives and partisans, if the former trial was not largely attended, was not given newspaper notoriety, if sentiment in favor of defendants had not been expressed or had been very infrequently expressed, if the defendants' 765 affiants had formed no opinion and had heard none in their several talks "with the majority of the people living within" their respective townships their affidavits would *Page 833 naturally have been so drawn. As will be seen excitement and prejudice against the state is not disputed.

The twenty-six defendants with their witnesses and attorneys (whose names to the number of eleven are subscribed to the resistance) are, as asserted therein, "practically all" residents of Jefferson county. These twenty-six defendants are charged with frauds and conspiracies which though distinct are of the same general nature. The names in the several informations show an interlocking of defendants. The charges are that they sold, or assisted in the sale of considerable numbers of native cattle of good quality and condition actually shown to the purchasers but fraudulently delivered other cattle — range stock, inferior and less valuable. The purchasers (prosecuting witnesses) are non-residents. Judging from the amounts involved some of the defendants at least are of financial importance. That defendants have "associates and relatives" in the county, as recited, is not disputed and is a very just inference. One of the cases was tried. The trial attracted attention, was largely attended, was given newspaper notoriety. Jefferson county has 16,000 inhabitants, including Fairfield, the county seat, of some 6600. The appellation of the cases attached by defendants in the affidavits presented by them, as well as that in those presented by the state, is "the so-called cattle cases." It appears from the return that defendants filed the separate affidavits of some 765 residents of the county, all similar. The affidavit set out in the return was made before one of defendants' attorneys as notary. It would be preposterous to assume that the language of these similar affidavits was dictated by the 765 affiants, or that the affidavits were spontaneously offered by the affiants to the court without the approach of, or that they were not the product of interviews by, defendants or their attorneys. The affidavits so drawn and presented to the court do not say that there is no prejudice or excitement against the state, but that "there is no prejudice or excitement against the state * * * which would in any manner prevent the state from obtaining a fair and impartial trial." The purpose of the affidavits in the form presented evidently was not to dispute the factual assertions in the state's application but to qualify the affiants to give and to set forth their opinions that the prejudice and excitement would not preclude a fair and impartial trial. On defendants' *Page 834 showing 765 residents of different, inferentially all, townships of Jefferson county were manifestly interviewed by defendants or their representatives; each of the 765 "talked with the majority of the people living within" their respective townships. The showing reflects an enormous amount of discussion throughout the county of a well understood subject — the "so-called cattle cases." Each of the defendants asserts that he is "well acquainted with the sentiment of the people in (his) immediate community relative to the so-called cattle cases." The affidavits imply that which might from the undenied facts be well inferred that there was in each of the communities of the county sentiment relative to these cases. Two hundred and sixty of the affiants are residents of Fairfield, the county seat, where the case if not removed must be tried and where on this showing an atmosphere of prejudice has been created. If affiants could have truthfully deposed that there had been no, or very little, discussion of the cattle cases, or that no sentiment or prejudice or excitement had been aroused or existed their affidavits undoubtedly would have been so drawn. That public sentiment has not been aroused is not only not claimed but is improbable. That such excitement is one of prejudgment and excitement is not denied but impliedly admitted. The language of the affidavits, under the circumstances disclosed, is presumptively that of the defendants or their representatives and should be taken most strongly against them. Nebraska Moline Plow Co. v. Fuehring, 72 N.W. (Neb.) 1003. The assertion "that there is no prejudice or excitement * * * which would in any manner prevent the state from obtaining a fair and impartial trial" is an admission of the fact of prejudice and excitement and the assertion only of opinion that it will not prevent the state from obtaining a fair and impartial trial. Hronik v. Warty, 205 Iowa 1111, 1116; Callanan v. Williams,71 Iowa 363; Sheldon, Hoyt Co. v. Middleton, 10 Iowa 17; Davis v. Green, 260 U.S. 349, 67 L. Ed. 299; Ex. Parte Wall, 107 U.S. 265, 275; United States v. Larkin, 153 Fed. 113, 115 (Writ of Error Dismissed) 208 U.S. 333, 52 L. Ed. 517; Whiting v. Price, 48 N.E. 772, 169 Mass. 576, 61 Am. St. Reports, 307.

The result of sustaining defendants' theory and affidavits would be to assume that on the exercise of a vast and impossible *Page 835 number of peremptory challenges the state might theoretically have a fair trial.

Neither defendants nor their affiants in any event could be found to have presented false affidavits of the nonexistence of prejudice. Even though the affiants should all testify that they were prejudiced and that there was prejudice and excitement against the state all they represented by their affidavits was that the prejudice and excitement would not prevent the state from having a fair and impartial trial. One who has prejudged the case very naturally fails to recognize the fact that he is prejudiced. Sentiment agreeable to his opinion is in his thinking not prejudiced sentiment. A fair and impartial trial in the minds of those who approve of the acquittal, and who believe that those who have not been tried should be acquitted, would very naturally mean a trial which would result in harmony with their preconceived judgment — acquittal.

The question here is to be determined prospectively whether the state can "receive a fair and impartial trial" not, after the event, whether it has received a fair and impartial trial. The trial begins with the calling of the jury. If at that time the community from which the jury must be drawn and in which the case must be tried is excited and prejudiced against the prosecution the state cannot receive a fair and impartial trial any more than a runner if compelled to start in the race under handicap can have a fair race against competitors not handicapped but otherwise on an equality with him. The state is handicapped from the start. The state may not be able to make out a case for the jury. It may make out a case such that even a prejudiced jury would be ashamed to reject. The handicap may by the event turn out to have been without prejudice or be overcome. Nevertheless the trial was not fair and impartial. The state if it wins wins in the face of unfair obstacles and an unfair trial.

The accusations against the defendants are of such a character and against so many persons, so interlocked and interwoven as to suggest, if proved, organized crime. The grosser crimes (and for that matter defiance of the law respecting minor ones) "strike at the very being of society." 4 Blackstone Com. *5; 4 Broom and Hadley's Com. (Ed. 1869). The perpetrator is an enemy of society. The legislature is in the exercise of its *Page 836 very proper power and duty in defining crime and prescribing the method of procedure for its punishment. The legislature, the executive and the judiciary are the state in the exercise of their respective functions. The state that through either department of its government renders itself impotent in the prosecution and punishment of the criminal has little left to justify its continued existence, or to claim further loyalty of its citizens, the large equivalent of which is protection of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. These days of disorder especially call for circumspection not only in the legislature and the executive but in the judiciary that criminal accusations are fully tried and decided in equal fairness to the State and to the accused.

The trial judge ruled and his return emphasizes "that the state's showing in support of their petition in light of the resistance thereto filed by the defendants was (we italicize)insufficient to satisfy me that there was any excitement or prejudice against the state of (or) Jefferson county that would in any manner prevent the state from securing a fair and impartial trial * * * in Jefferson county." When the application is made by the defendant its denial in advance of the trial is not fatal for at the conclusion of an unsuccessful trial he may have a new trial. The state, however, after defendant has been put in jeopardy, if verdict against it is returned, is without remedy. The state is peculiarly entitled to have its application determined in accordance with common experience and probabilities and in the exercise of sound discretion, not merely on individual or personal views.

The resistance left the state's prima facie case unimpaired.

By the statute on the record in the court below the state had the right to change of venue. The court acted illegally in denying the application and the state is entitled under the statute to the writ of certiorari.

This conclusion makes it unnecessary to discuss the right of the State to the common law prerogative writ of certiorari for the removal of all proceedings pending in an inferior court under the constitutional power and duty in this Court "to issue all writs and process necessary to secure justice to parties, and exercise a supervisory control over all inferior judicial tribunals throughout the State." Section 4, Article 5. See, however: *Page 837 Hutchins v. Des Moines, 176 Iowa 189, 205, 213, 214, et seq.; Davis County v. Horn, 4 G. Greene (Iowa) 94; Ware v. Sanders,146 Iowa 233, 241, et seq.; U.S. v. Commrs., 1 Morris (Iowa) *31, *36; Home Savings Trust Co. v. Dist. Court, 121 Iowa 1, 10; Poole, Gilliam Co. v. Seney, 70 Iowa 275, 280; 3 Stephen's Com. (15th Ed.) 350, 660; 4 Id. 320, 321, 374, 375; 3 Blackstone Com. *42; 4 Id. *265; 4 Broom Hadley's Com. (Ed. 1869) Page 341, 418; Ridges' Constitutional Law (3rd Ed.) 490; 2 Hawkins' P.C. (6th Ed.) 405; Carter's History English Courts (5th Ed.) 55, 57; Ridges' Constitutional Law of England 188; Id. (3rd Ed.) 232; Attorney General v. Blossom, 1 Wis. 277, Attorney General v. Railroad Companies, 35 Wis. 425, 517, et seq.; State v. New Jersey Jockey Club, 19 Atl. (N.J.) 976; Duggen v. McGruder, 12 Am. Dec. (Miss.) 527, 528, 1 Miss. (Walker) 112; State v. Dobson, 36 S.W. (Mo.) 238, 243; State v. Fleckinger, 152 La. 337, 93 So. 115; State v. Dist. Court, 186 N.W. (N. Dak.) 381. See paper by Mr. Justice Stevens in proceedings Iowa State Bar Association Vol. 26, Page 174, and cases collected in dissenting Opinion Winneshiek County St. Bk. v. Dist. Court, 203 Iowa 1284.

The writ of certiorari is sustained.

The orders of the District Court denying the petitions of the state to change place of trial are annulled and the causes are remanded with instructions to change the place of trial as provided by Section 13819, Code, 1927. Writ sustained. Orders Annulled. Causes Remanded.

STEVENS, GRIMM, KINDIG, ALBERT, and De GRAFF, JJ., concur.