Title: State v. LeCoure

State: montana

Issuer: Montana Supreme Court

Document:

491 P.2d 1228 (1971) The STATE of Montana, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. Kenneth A. LeCOURE, Defendant and Respondent. No. 12087. Supreme Court of Montana. Submitted December 1, 1971. Decided December 20, 1971. *1229 Robert L. Woodahl, Atty. Gen., J.C. Weingartner, Deputy Atty. Gen., argued, Helena, Lawrence G. Stimatz, County Atty., J. Brian Tierney, Deputy County Atty., argued, Butte, for plaintiff and appellant. Holland, Holland & Haxby, David L. Holland, argued, Butte, for defendant and respondent. JOHN C. HARRISON, Justice. This appeal arises from an order granting a motion to dismiss a second degree assault Information, on the grounds defendant had been "once in jeopardy". The facts giving rise to the case are: Fred J. Bassett, a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agent assigned to the Butte office, on September 13, 1969, upon arrival in Butte from a trip to Bozeman, took his government vehicle to the government garage. He picked up his own vehicle and proceeded to the local FBI office to turn in some equipment and sign out. He parked his vehicle in a reserved area and shortly thereafter defendant backed his pickup into the front of Bassett's vehicle, causing considerable damage. Defendant did not stop after the accident. However, due to a stop sign at an intersection he stopped and Bassett, who had followed defendant's car on foot in an attempt to get the license number of the vehicle which had damaged his vehicle, was confronted by defendant. Defendant struck Bassett causing him to be hospitalized for fractures of the cheek bone and for dental surgery. Thereafter an agent of the FBI, one Hal Vogalsang, contacted Mark Sullivan, the county attorney of Silver Bow County, in regard to filing charges in the state court on the alleged assault. He later informed Mr. Sullivan that a decision had been made to prosecute the defendant in the federal court, rather than in the state court. The matter was submitted to a federal grand jury which issued the following true bill: The case went to trial before Judge Murray, sitting with a jury, on May 25, 1970. After the jury had been empaneled and the government had completed its case and rested, the defendant through counsel moved the court for judgment of acquittal. On May 26, 1970, Judge Murray granted the motion and stated to the jury: On May 27, 1970, judgment of acquittal was entered. Eleven months later, on April 27, 1971, an Information charging defendant with a felony, towit assault in the second degree, was filed in Silver Bow County. Defendant did not enter a plea, but submitted to the court a motion to dismiss on the grounds that "prosecution is barred under the laws of the State of Montana and of the Constitutions of the United States and the State of Montana." After a hearing on the motion and the matter briefed for the trial court by both parties, the motion to dismiss was granted. The only issue before this Court is whether the disposition of the case by the federal court bars the state from filing similar charges in the state court. Under the fact situation here, the answer must be in the affirmative. The state in its argument refers to the disposition of the case in the federal court as a dismissal. The record in the federal courts shows a judgment of acquittal. The state would have this Court take the position that the reason the case was filed in the state court is that the federal court lacked jurisdiction. The record in the federal court is to the contrary. Here, an indictment was returned in the federal district court; defendant was arrested; he appeared and entered a plea of not guilty. At this point the question of jurisdiction did not arise for obviously the federal court did feel it had jurisdiction. What the United States district attorney's office failed to prove was that Bassett was acting in his official capacity when the assault occurred; that failure, not, as it argues here, a failure of jurisdiction, was fatal. Defendant was in jeopardy and nothing can breathe new life into a criminal action against him in the state courts. Here, in the federal court defendant was charged with assaulting Fred J. Bassett, an agent of the FBI, engaged in and on account *1231 of the performance of his official duties. The charge in the state court was "second degree assault". The difference in the wording of the two charging documents does not change the fact that the charge arose out of the "same transaction". State v. McDonald, Mont., 491 P.2d 711. Those who had to make the decision into which court or jurisdiction they would bring the case had a choice state or federal. Having elected to proceed in the federal court, whatever the motive, and the defendant having been acquitted there, they can not now have another try at the expense of defendant. The decision of the trial court is affirmed. JAMES T. HARRISON, C.J., and HASWELL, DALY and CASTLES, JJ., concur.