Crebs v. Amrine

113 P.2d 1084, 153 Kan. 736, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 197
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 7, 1941
DocketNo. 35,087
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 113 P.2d 1084 (Crebs v. Amrine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crebs v. Amrine, 113 P.2d 1084, 153 Kan. 736, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 197 (kan 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This is an application by C. C. Crebs for a writ of habeas corpus to secure his release from the penitentiary where he is serving a life term of imprisonment pursuant to a judgment and sentence of the district court of Seward county rendered on November 26,1930.

Attached to petitioner’s application for a writ of habeas corpus is a copy of the information on which C. C. Crebs, alias Chet Lawson, was prosecuted for the murder of Charles Doan, in Seward county, Kansas, on November 18, 1930. Also attached to the application was a copy of the journal entry recording the judicial proceedings which were had in the Seward county district court on November 26, 1930, pertinent excerpts of which read:

“The plaintiff appeared by John C. King, deputy county attorney, and the defendant appeared in person in the custody of the sheriff. The court advised the defendant as to his right to have counsel, and defendant announced that he had no counsel and desired none, and that he was ready to proceed.
“Thereupon defendant was formally arraigned and entered his plea of guilty as charged in the information, which plea was by the court accepted.
“Again on the same day this cause coming on for sentence of the defendant, the parties appeared as before. It appearing to the court that there is no legal reason why sentence should not be pronounced.
[737]*737“It is by the court ordered and adjudged that the defendant is guilty of murder in the first degree, as charged in the information, and that he be and is hereby sentenced to confinement and hard labor in the Kansas penitentiary for life. And the sheriff of Seward county is ordered to convey the prisoner to said institution to serve said sentence. Signed: G. L. Light, Judge!’

The grounds on which petitioner bases his application are these:

(1) That he is not guilty of the murder as charged.

(2) The records will show that he was denied counsel by the court.

(3) That a confession was signed by him “by duress, abuse, cruel and unusual punishment,” and that such “confession was written by the abusers.”

(4) That he was denied a lawful hearing in due course of law.

(5) That sentence was pronounced without jurisdiction.

(6) That “he never at any time pleaded guilty to said charge and the state cannot show where he has been lawfully convicted.”

On order of this court the application summarized above was ordered to be filed without requiring a deposit for costs; and a rule was entered requiring the warden of the penitentiary to plead thereto.

In an amended answer, filed in the warden’s behalf, the state traversed all the material allegations of the petitioner’s application. Attached to this answer was a copy of the judgment and sentence, and of the commitment, dated November 26, 1930, authorizing the incarceration of “C. C. Crebs, alias Chet Lawson” in the penitentiary for the term of his natural life, on his plea of guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree.

Also attached to the answer was an “Exhibit C,” which is a typewritten document of twenty-eight pages entitled “In the Matter of the Statement of C. C. Crebs, Before Hon. G. L. Light (district judge), and L. E. Warden, undersheriff, on Friday, November 21, 1930, at 4 o’clock, p. m.” Later in this opinion we shall summarize its principal contents and state the circumstances under which it was made and later transcribed and signed by Crebs and authenticated by Judge Light.

An affidavit of L. E. Warden, now chief of police of Liberal, county seat of Seward county, who was undersheriff of that county at and about the time of the Doan murder in November, 1930, avers that in the evening of November 18, Crebs was brought into the county jail by the sheriff, Logan Graham, accompanied by certain officers or other persons not now identifiable, and delivered into the [738]*738custody of L. E. Warden, undersheriff. According to Warden’s affidavit those officers or some of them entered the jail and stayed there with Crebs “a number of hours that night endeavoring to learn his connection with the murder.” Warden’s affidavit does not say who those officers were, but Judge Light’s affidavit (to which we shall refer below) makes it clear that the sheriff himself was one of them. Warden avers:

“I was personally present all the time these other officers questioned him about his whereabouts and other matters connected with his knowledge of the murder, and know of my ¡own personal knowledge that no ‘third degree’ methods of any kind whatsoever were used against the said C. C. Crebs in attempting to cause him to make a confession or to talk about the matter.”

The averment just quoted is squarely at odds with that of Crebs, whose verified statement reads:

“Soon after your petitioner was placed in jail the- sheriff and deputies started beating and abusing. I would fall asleep, they would beat me on the head [with] those blackjacks. ... I had no food from the 18th of November, until the 20th. I could not use the toilet which was just outside the cell they had me locked in. I used the floor before they would get anything for me to use. The night of the 18th they never took the handcuffs off of me nor the shackles and threatened to let the mob have me if I did not plead guilty. They held me and burned my bare feet with an electric light bulb which was attached to' electricity and caused intense heat, and applied to petitioner’s bare feet which caused big blisters to issue on the bottom of petitioner’s bare feet.
“They beat petitioner in his stomach causing a hernia, . . , On the 21st they gave me a good breakfast, and then two deputies took me before the judge and asked me to sign the manufactured and forged confession; petitioner refused to sign confession and they took petitioner back to jail and that night they told me to sign it or else, ... I finally signed the confession and told them again and again that I was not guilty of that charge.”

Apparently Crebs was held in jail without a warrant until November 20, when a complaint was filed before M. H. Flood, justice of the peace, charging him with the murder of Charles Doan. A warrant was issued and formally returned with recitals of service on November 24.

On November 21, according to Undersheriff Warden’s affidavit, he had a conversation with Crebs in the county jail, in which Crebs' said he would tell Warden “the whole thing." Warden’s affidavit continues:

“He [Crebs] stated that while he was in the penitentiary in Colorado he had learned from a fellow prisoner that Charley Doan of Liberal was a man who always had a roll of money on his person; he then told me all about the facts in connection with the murder of Charley Doan, how he had been around [739]

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Related

State v. McCarther
416 P.2d 290 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1966)
Hartman v. Edmondson
283 P.2d 397 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1955)
Martin v. Edmondson
270 P.2d 791 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1954)
Fisher v. Fraser
233 P.2d 1066 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1951)
State v. Radke
212 P.2d 296 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1949)
Downs v. Hudspeth
178 P.2d 219 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1947)
Crebs v. Hudspeth
164 P.2d 338 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1945)
Smith v. Amrine
134 P.2d 400 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1943)
Claflin v. State
119 P.2d 540 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
113 P.2d 1084, 153 Kan. 736, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crebs-v-amrine-kan-1941.