Ex parte Briggs

15 F.2d 84, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3880
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJune 29, 1925
DocketNos. 4608, 4611-4615
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 F.2d 84 (Ex parte Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Briggs, 15 F.2d 84, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3880 (mnd 1925).

Opinion

VAN YALKENBURGH, Circuit Judge.

Upon application writs were issued in tbe above-entitled cases, and pending a bearing tbereon, owing to tbe engagements of tbe United States attorney, tbe petitioners were admitted to bail. Upon due notice, by tbeir counsel above named, all parties appeared before the undersigned Circuit Judge at chambers in St. Paul, Minn., within said circuit, and by consent said cases were all beard at one bearing, and after full argument, and tbe submission of authorities and briefs, were submitted for final determination upon tbe merits.

Tbe petitioner Briggs was indicted at tbe special September term, 1923, of tbe District Court of tbe United States in and for tbe Eastern District of Oklahoma, held at tbe city of Tulsa, in tbe county of Tulsa, in that state, for tbe forgery of several indorsements and signatures on certain obligations of tbe United States. Tbe indictment was in four counts. On tbe 18th day of April, 1924, be entered a plea of guilty to tbe charges, and tbe imposition óf sentence upon bis said plea was postponed from time to time until tbe 13th day of March, 1925. Tbe plea was entered before Judge Williams at Muskogee; on tbe 13th day of March, 1925, at Tulsa, tbe following sentence was imposed by Judge Kennamer:

“It is thereupon now by tbe court considered, ordered, and adjudged that said defendant C. C. Briggs he imprisoned in tbe city jail at Muskogee for a period of five months, and that be make bis fine under tbe United States in tbe sum of $100 on each count, 1, 2, 3) 4, and stand committed until said fine is paid; sentence to run concurrent. ’ ’

Tbe petitioners Freeman, Lee, and Clark were jointly indicted in tbe District Court of tbe United States for tbe Eastern District of Oklahoma at Muskogee at tbe special March term, 1925. Tbe indictment contained four counts. Tbe first count was for conspiracy, willfully, wrongfully, corruptly, and feloniously to sell intoxicating beverages containing more than one-half- of 1 per centum of alcohol by volume, and fit for use as a beverage. Tbe second count charged them with a sale on tbe 12th day of February, 1925, in said Tulsa county. Tbe third count charged them with á sale ón tbe 14th day of February, 1925, in said county, and tbe fourth count .charged them with a sale on tbe 20th day of February, 1925, in said county. On the 21st day of March, 1925 defendants pleaded guilty to certain counts of this indictment other than tbe conspiracy, under which no action, has been taken, and received jail sentences. These sentences were imposed by Judge Kennamer at Tulsa.

On or about tbe 26th day of February, 1925, an informbtion was filed against the petitioner Tilley in tbe District Court of tbe United States for tbe Eastern District of Oklahoma, at Tulsa, Okl., charging him in tbe first count with selling alcohol in violation of tbe National Prohibition Act (Comp. St. § 1013814 et seq.) at said place on or about tbe 17th day of February, 1925, and in tbe second count for a like sale on or about tbe 21st day óf February, 1925. On tbe 20th day of March, 1925, before Judge Kennamer, be entered a plea of guilty, and was sentenced to serve a term of six months in tbe city jail at Tulsa.

On or about tbe 26th day of February, 1925, at Tulsa, Tulsa county, Okla., an information was filed in tbe District Court there, as and for tbe Eastern District of Oklahbma,- charging tbe petitioner J. I. (alias Wbitey) Barnett with having sold whisky in tbe city and county of Tulsa on tbe 24th day of February, 1925. On tbe 20th day of March, 1925, before Judge Kennamer,' be entered bis plea of guilty and was [86]*86sentenced to serve a term of 6 months in the city jail of Tulsa at Tulsa. All of said proceedings, at all the dates hereinabove mentioned purported to have taken place in the Eastern District of Oklahoma.

By Act of Congress approved February' 16, 1925 (Comp. St. §§ 1088-1088e), there was created within the state of Oklahoma a new district, designated as the Northern District of Oklahoma, which was carved out of the former Eastern and Western Districts within that state. Section 5 of the act (Comp. St. § 1088d) reads as follows:

"The jurisdiction and authority of the courts and officers of the Western District of Oklahoma, and of the courts and officers of the Eastern District of Oklahoma as heretofore divided between them by the order of the senior judge of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit of the United States over the territory embraced within said Northern District of Oklahoma, shall continue as heretofore until the organization of the District Court of said Northern District, and thereupon shall cease and determine, save and except in so far as the authority of the junior judge of said Eastern District is continued in him as judge of said Northern District, and save and except as to the authority expressly conferred by law on said courts, judges or officers, or any of them, to commence and proceed with the prosecution of crimes and offenses committed therein prior to the establishment of the said Northern District, and save and except as to any other authority expressly reserved to them or any of them under any law applicable in the ease of the creation or change of the divisions or districts of District Courts of the United States.”

The order of Judge Sanborn, to which reference is made in the act/ contained the following language, upon which, in large part, these applications for habeas corpus are based:

"Because the offices and records of the United States marshal and the United States district attorney are at Muskogee, and it has been the practice to hold the sessions of the grand jury for the entire district at Muskogee, the judicial business of the entire district of convening and presiding over the grand jury and of directing its course, of receiving indictments, informations, and pleas of guilty, and pronouncing sentences upon pleas of guilty, of arraigning defendants, and taking their pleas of guilty, and allowing bail before hearing or trial, is assigned to Hon. R. L.. Williams, but the argument óf law questions and the trial of criminal eases on motions, demurrers, and pleas shall be had in the division in which the offense is charged to have been committed.”

Tulsa and Tulsa county are now situated in the Northern District of Oklahoma. Pri- or to the creation and organization of this district, Tulsa and Tulsa county were situated in the old Eastern District. A regular term of the District Court was there held, and this city and county were in the territorial division assigned to Judge Kennamer, Junior District Judge, by the order of Judge Sanborn, senior Circuit Judge, to which reference has been made. At the time the act creating the Northern District was approved Judge Kennamer was holding a special term of the District Court at Tulsa, and continued the session until late in March, and to a date subsequent to all the proceedings now under consideration.

The claims of the several petitioners differ in some respects, but the general claim is that, after the creation of the Northern District, which petitioners fix at the date of approval of the act by the President, Judge Kennamer had no authority to sit as a judge of the Eastern District,, at least within the’territory embraced within the boundaries of the new Northern District, and that any court then sitting at Tulsa was not a court of the Eastern District.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F.2d 84, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-briggs-mnd-1925.