Ex parte Bugg

145 S.W. 831, 163 Mo. App. 44, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 187
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 145 S.W. 831 (Ex parte Bugg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Bugg, 145 S.W. 831, 163 Mo. App. 44, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 187 (Mo. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

COX, J.

Petitioner is imprisoned in the Howell county jail at West Plains under a capias execution under a judgment of conviction in the Howell County Circuit Court upon a charge of illegally selling liquor and prosecutes this writ to secure his release contending that his imprisonment is illegal.

The facts connected with his imprisonment are as follows: At the December term 1908 of the Howell County Circuit Court and on January 18, 1909, petitioner was convicted in cases Nos. 43 and 54 on that docket upon the charge of illegally selling liquor. In case No. 43 a fine of $300 was assessed. In case No. 54 the punishment was fixed at six months in jail. Judgment in regular form was rendered in each case and petitioner then imprisoned in case No. 43 for failure to pay the fine and costs in that case. He remained in jail under this judgment until April 16, 1909, at [46]*46■which time it was -feared he was contracting tuberculosis and upon the advice of the county physician and the prosecuting attorney, the court, then in session, made an order for his release from jail as follows: “On this day upon recommendation of the prosecuting attorney and the certificate of the county physician, Ductor L. J. Nichols, it is ordered by the court that further punishment herein be suspended, that defendant may seek a change of climate. ’ ’ This order was made at a term subsequent to the one at which the conviction was had and judgment rendered. No order was made in case No. 54 in which a jail sentence of six months was imposed. On April 19, 1909 petitioner with his wife left West Plains to seek a change of climate and went to western Kansas where he remained until about Dec. 25, 1910’, when he returned to West Plains and remained there until March 30’, 1911, when .he again went west. This time to California, where he remained until November 15, 1911, when he again returned to West Plains and engaged in assisting his father in the hotel business where he remained until February 23, 1912, at which date a capias execution was issued upon the judgment in case No. 54 imposing a jail sentence of six months and he was imprisoned under that execution and still remains in custody.

It is contended that the court had no power to order a suspension of the punishment adjudged against defendant and that the lapse of time now entitles him to a release. The right of a court to indefinitely suspend sentence after conviction or execution after judgment has been a source of much controversy in the courts and the authorities are anything but harmonious. The right of a court to indefinitely suspend sentence after conviction is upheld in New York, People ex rel. v. Court of Sessions, 141 N. Y. 288, 36 N. E. 386; Massachusetts, Com. v. Dowdican Bail, 115 Mass. 133; New Hampshire, Sylvester v. State, 20 Atl. 594; North [47]*47Carolina, State v. Crooke, 29 L. R. A. 260, 20 S. E. 513; New Jersey, State v. Addy, 43 N. J. L. 113, 39 Am. Rep. 547; Mississippi, Gibson v. State, 8 So. 329; California, People v. Patrick, 118 Cal. 332, 50 Pac. 425; Florida, Ex parte Williams, 8 So. 425. This power of tbe courts has been denied in Michigan, Weaver v. People, 33 Mich. 296; People v. Brown, 54 Mich. 15, 15 N. W. 571; Wisconsin, Re Webb, 27 L. R. A. 256; Georgia, Neal v. State, 42 L. R. A. 190, 30 S. E. 858; North Dakota, Re Markuson, 64 N. W. 939; Illinois, People ex rel. Smith v. Allen, 41 L. R. A. 473; Federal Court, United States v. Wilson, 46 Fed. 748, and in this State, State v. Hockett, 129 Mo. App. 639, 108 S. W. 599.

On the question of the power of the court to indefinitely suspend execution after sentence and judgment, the conflict is not so great. This power has been upheld in North Carolina, State v. Whitt, 23 S. E. 452, but the weight of authority seems to be largely against this proposition and to our mind it is clear in the absence of a statute authorizing it, to permit a court after judgment is pronounced to indefinitely postpone its execution is in effect to permit the court to usurp the pardoning power which is lodged elsewhere and cannot be upheld upon either reason or authority. [Re Webb, 89 Wis. 354, 27 L. R. A. 356; State v. Neal (Ga.), 42 L. R. A. 190; State v. Voss (Ia.), 8 L. R. A. 767.]

Our conclusion is that the order of the court in case No. 43 suspending farther punishment therein was void and the release of the petitioner thereunder unwarranted in law. The rights of the petitioner are therefore to be determined without giving any consideration to the order of the court and he stands before this court exactly as he would if the sheriff had voluntarily released him without any order of the court. Viewing the case from this standpoint the first question which presents itself is whether in contemplation of law the sentence had been complied with. It has been held that when a jail sentence is imposed the date of [48]*48imprisonment begins on the day the sentence is pronounced and that after the lapse of the time for which imprisonment was imposed the prisoner has in legal effect served the sentence whether he has been confined in prison during the time or not. [Re Webb, 89 Wis. 354.] We are not disposed to follow that case. In the absence of some other statutory provision, the judgment of a court imposing a jail sentence can only be ■satisfied by a compliance with its terms. Neither the honest mistake nor the willful disregard of duty on the part of the officers whose duty it is to enforce the judgment can release the convicted party from its consequences. [State v. Neal (Ga.), 42 L. R. A. 190; Ex parte Vance, 90 Cal. 208, 13 L. R. A. 574.] The unau-' tliorized release of petitioner from custody did not in any way operate to his advantage or to his disadvantage at the time. He was not technically in jail while he was, in fact, at liberty, and the lapse of the time after sentence for which he was adjudged to be confined in jail did not release him from liability to be retaken and required to serve the remainder of the time. The question then arises whether there should be any limit to the time within which a judgment may be enforced under such circumstances. If there is to be no limitation then a case might arise in which, years after the judgment had been pronounced, and possibly, after a man had reared a family and attained to a position of high standing in the community, he and his family might be humiliated and disgraced by the bringing to light of an old judgment long since forgotten and which, in all good conscience, ought never again to see the light of day. To say that under such circumstances a man should be cast into prison to satisfy an outraged law would be as absurd as to hold on the other hand that society could have no protection against the honest mistakes o.r willful neglect of the officers it commissions as the guardians of its welfare. In solving the problem before us we take it that we [49]*49are to be governed by a sound public policy 'which seeks only the public good and apply its precepts to the facts in this case. "What the public policy of this state is on the question of the execution of judgments of conviction in criminal cases may, we think, be gathered from the general course of legislation touching that matter. Looking to these statutes we observe that while in civil cases there is a Statute of Limitations applying to the enforcement of judgments, we have no such statute in criminal eases, except that fines may be collected by civil process and in that way are brought under the limitations applying to civil judgments. But as to jail sentences, there is no Statute of Limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W. 831, 163 Mo. App. 44, 1912 Mo. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-bugg-moctapp-1912.