Bird v. State

122 So. 539, 154 Miss. 493, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 154
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1929
DocketNo. 28028.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 122 So. 539 (Bird v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bird v. State, 122 So. 539, 154 Miss. 493, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 154 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

*496 EthkldgEi, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the regular ’February, 1929, term of the circuit court of the Second district of Jones county appellant was convicted on a charge of burglary, and sentenced to a term in the penitentiary, from which he prosecutes this appeal. The indictment charged him with burglarizing the office of Hr. T. E. Brent, a dentist, who had an office in an office building of the city of Laurel fronting on the street. A stairway led to a hallway on the *497 second floor upon which the office opened. The building and office were equipped with electric lights.

A witness, employed by the city as a fireman, was near this office building some time about 6:15' or 6:20 P. M. on the 12th day of January, 1929, and saw a light flash off and on several times in Dr. Brent’s'office. He was then about sixty feet from the office and ,had a view of the windows in said office, and the light kept flashing on and off. Pie saw a hand of some one picking packages from the shelves in the office. He notified a policeman of the city, and he and the policeman went up the stairway and down the hall to Dr. Brent’s office. This was about ten minutes from the time he first saw the lights flash in the office. When he reached the office the front door of the office ivas open, and defendant was coming out. The policeman asked him his name, and he told him it ivas Lloyd; asked him what he was doing there, and he gave a statement' that he went into the office to see the doctor. The policeman arrested him and searched him at the time for weapons, then carried him to police headquarters and made a thorough search and found upon him a hacksaw, a screw driver, a paper knife with the handle wrapped, and a flash-light. After reaching the police station he was also questioned and gave his name then as Bird, and claimed he was in the business of buying gold fillings, platinum, and other materials from dentists, and reselling it to firms recasting it.

After making the search at police headquarters, the policeman and fireman, county attorney, and Dr. Brent returned to the office building and found that the door stop had been removed by some instrument by inserting it between the stop and the door frame, apparently a screw driver. They found the office ransacked, drawers opened, and a general rifling of the office, but they did not find anything missing, as the dentist had stored these valuables in a secret place. The dentist was with the policeman at the time of the last visit to the office.

*498 Tiie dentist testified that ho closed and locked his office as he went out, and that no one had a key to his office, except the colored janitress. The janitress was introduced as a witness and testified that she did not open the office and was not up there on the evening in question.

The defendant testified in his own behalf and stated that he went up to the office for the purpose of seeing if the dentist had any of the materials, which he was engaged in buying, for sale. When he went in the office, although the light was off, he continued on to the back office; he said that very often when he called on dentists they were in the back where they have a little light with a drop shade, and when this is so you cannot tell from the front whether they are in or not. He testified that the hallway was lighted, and he passed another office which was open, and he intended to return to it on a like mission when he was arrested. He also testified that he did not see any other person in the office, and that he did not reach his hand up to shelf to take anything, and that the hand seen by the witness was not his hand, and that he did not flash the light but one time.

When the case came on for trial the regular judge, who had theretofore been acting in the district, and who held the first two weeks of the term of court in which this trial took place, had resigned, having been elected to Congress. The Lieutenant Governor, acting- as Governor in the absence of the Governor, appointed a judge especially to hold this particular term of court. This special judge was not a resident of the circuit court district in which Laurel is situated, and defendant, when his case was called, filed a plea challenging the right of the state to proceed against him on account of the judge not being by his appointment a regular judge, and because it is alleged the law did not authorize the appointment of a special judge in such cases, and also because the judge so appointed was not a resident of the circuit court district. *499 This plea was demurred to by the state, demurrer sustained, and the trial proceeded -with.

The defendant presented a special bill of exceptions which recited the circumstances of the judge’s appointment, and that he was not in fact a resident and qualified elector of the district. The first contention on appeal is that the judge was not qualified to act as judge and had no jurisdiction over the defendant so as to try him. The answer of the state to this contention is that it is wholly immaterial whether the special judge was a resident of the district, or not, or whether his appointment was lawful or not, that he was at least a cle facto judge, and that under section 3007, Hemingway’s 1927 Code (section 3473, Code 1906), his actions were valid. This section reads as follows: ‘ ‘ The official acts of any person in possession of a public office, and exercising the functions thereof, shall be valid and binding as official acts, in regard to all persons interested or affected thereby, whether such person be'lawfully entitled to hold the office or not, and whether such person be lawfully qualified or not; but such person shall be liable to all the penalties imposed by law for usurping or unlawfully holding office, or for exercising the functions thereof without lawful right, or without being qualified according to law.”

The Constitution does not provide in terms that the judges shall be residents and qualified electors of the district for which they are elected or appointed, but the statute provides.that a judge shall reside in his district, and the Constitution provides that all officers must be qualified electors. In the case of the appointment of a special judge the Constitution and statutes are both silent as to whether the judge shall reside in the district or not. It has long been the practice of the executive department to appoint special judges to try special cases or to hold special terms of court without regard to whether they were resident of the district or not, and *500 such judges and officers acting as special judges in such cases often have not been residents of the district in which they hold the terms of -court. It is well settled in this state that the acts of a de facto judge are valid, regardless of whether he was properly appointed or qualified or not, and we deem it unnecessary to pass upon the question as to whether the judge should have been appointed ‘from the resident attorneys of the district, and whether or not the effect of his appointment, under the laws, was to hold until an election was held or only until the special term of the court was over.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Robert Lenoir v. State of Mississippi
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2025
Travis Jerome Harvey v. State of Mississippi
195 So. 3d 231 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2016)
In the Interest of S.M.K.S. v. Youth Court of Union County
155 So. 3d 747 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2015)
Kemp Ex Rel. Kemp v. Perkins
324 F. App'x 409 (Fifth Circuit, 2009)
Champluvier v. State
942 So. 2d 172 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2005)
Baker v. State
833 A.2d 1070 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2003)
McDonald v. McDonald
850 So. 2d 1182 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2002)
Barton v. Barton
726 So. 2d 163 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1998)
Wilma Walker v. Harry Sartin
Mississippi Supreme Court, 1995
Beatrice Barton v. Robert Eugene Barton
Mississippi Supreme Court, 1995
Nelson v. State
626 So. 2d 121 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1993)
Polk v. State
612 So. 2d 381 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1992)
Upshaw v. State
350 So. 2d 1358 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1977)
Crocker v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.
346 So. 2d 921 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1977)
Baylor v. State
246 So. 2d 516 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1971)
Butler v. State
212 So. 2d 573 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 So. 539, 154 Miss. 493, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-v-state-miss-1929.