Ex Parte Dusenberg v. Rudolph

30 S.W.2d 94, 325 Mo. 881, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 503
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 8, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 94 (Ex Parte Dusenberg v. Rudolph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Dusenberg v. Rudolph, 30 S.W.2d 94, 325 Mo. 881, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 503 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*884 FRANK, J.

Original proceedings in habeas corpus to procure the release of petitioner from the state penitentiary where he is now imprisoned. The issue and service of our writ and the production of the body of the petitioner were formally waived. It appears from the pleadings that on June 18, 1929, at a special term of the Circuit Court of Phelps County, petitioner entered a *885 plea of guilty to an information filed in said court, charging him. with the crime of robbery in said county, and was by said court sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term of thirty-five years, where he is now confined under said sentence.

It further appears from the pleadings that at the next regular September term, 1929, of said court, petitioner file'd an application for a writ of error coram nobis to set aside the judgment and sentence under which he was imprisoned. , On the hearing of this application, the prosecuting attorney admitted that the alleged robbery was not committed in Phelps County. The trial court so found, and for that reason set aside the judgment and sentence theretofore entered on petitioner’s plea of guilty.

The law is well settled that a circuit court has jurisdiction on writ of error corami nobis, or a motion in the nature of such a writ, to set aside a final judgment at a term subsequent to its rendition, for errors of fact which affect the validity and ^egmlau'ity of the proceedings which resulted in the rendition oí the judgment, and which were not in issue and adjudicated at the time the judgment was rendered. For example “a judgment rendered against an insane person without the intervention of a guardian; where a defendant dies after service of process, and before judgment; where a married woman (before the enactment of the Married Woman’s Act) was sued without her husband being joined and judgment rendered against her; judgment against an infant without a guardian ad litem, etc.”

It is also well settled that error coram nobis does not lie to correct an error of fact which was in issue and adjudicated at the time the judgment was rendered. “Only such errors can be assigned as are consistent with the record before the court, and the' court will not look into the cause of action on which the judgment was rendered, or consider any fact which might have been presented to the court on the trial of the cause, and still less any facts which were put in issue and adjudicated upon the trial.” [Simms v. Thompson, 291 Mo. 493, 515, 236 S. W. 876; Jeude v. Simms, 258 Mo. 26, 40, 166 S. W. 1048; State v. Stanley, 225 Mo. 525, 531, 125 S. W. 475.]

Petitioner however, insists that if the alleged robbery was not, in, fact, committed in Phelps County, the circuit court of that county had no jurisdiction of said alleged offense and for that reason its judgment against him was properly set aside.

There would be merit in petitioner’s claim if he had been in a position to raise the question of jurisdiction. The trouble with his contention is that the place where the robbery was committed was an issue of fact which the trial court had to determine for itself, and having once determined it, that determination is as much res jucbicata as the decision of any other issue in the case. [EPadley *886 v. Bernero, 103 Mo. App. 549, 554-5, 78 S. W. 64; Baker v. Smith’s Estate, 18 S. W. (2d) 147, 151; In re Lydia Sisk, 265 S. W. 536, 538, 305 Mo. 328.] The information charged petitioner with the commission of a robbery in Phelps County. The place where the crime ivas committed was an element of the offense and a vital issue in the ease-. If petitioner had not entered a plea of guilty to the charge, it would have been necessary for the State to prove, not only that he committed the robbery, but that he committed it in Phelps County. His plea of guilty took the place of evidence and was an admission of record of the truth of the charge that he committed the robbery in Phelps County. It has been said that “a plea of guilty, accepted and entered by the court, is a conviction of the highest order, the effect of which is to authorize the imposition of the sentence prescribed by law on a verdict of guilty of the crime sufficiently charged in the indictment or information.” [8 R. C. L. 116, sec. 85.] It is -well said in the brief of the learned Attorney-General “that petitioner could not enter a plea of guilty and after the term of court had expired, deny that any crime had in fact been committed or deny that he committed it, and offer evidence in support of such denials. The question of the commission of the crime, the time and place of its commission and the identity of the person committing it, are on a parity.”

The judgment and - sentence pronounced on petitioner’s plea of guilty at the June (1929) term became final and conclusive with the ending of that term. If this final judgment could be lawfully set aside on motion filed at a subsequent term for .alleged error of fact as to the venue of the crime, it could be set aside for alleged error of fact as to any other issue in the case. If such were the rule, there would be no stability in judgments, no end to litigation and the courts of this State would be flooded with applications for writs of habeas corpus on the ground that the petitioner’s conviction resulted from an erroneous decision of some issue of fact.

The decisive question in this habeas corpus proceeding is whether or not the circuit court had jurisdiction of the coram nobis proceedings. If so, its action in setting aside the judgment and sentence, although erroneous, is conclusive and entitles petitioner to his discharge. On the other hand, if the court w7as without jurisdiction, its action in setting aside the judgment and sentence was void and is subject to collateral attack.

Jurisdiction has been defined to be the right to adjudicate concerning the subject-matter in a given case. [Stark v. Kirchgraber, 186 Mo. 633, 645-6, 85 S. W. 868, 872.] A court may have jurisdiction of the- class of cases to -which the one to be adjudicated belongs, and yet not have jurisdiction of the particular case to be adjudicated. An example of this situation is found in Gray v. *887 Clements, 227 S. W. 111. That was a suit to quiet-title, in which a collateral attack was made on a judgment in a certain partition suit. In the partition suit the petition alleged and the judgment recited that plaintiff owned a life estate in the premises and the defendants had the remainder. On appeal to this court, point was made that the judgment in the partition suit was not subject to collateral attack. We held that while the court had jurisdiction to partition real estate, it did not have jurisdiction of the particular case because the facts alleged in the petition as well as the judgment on its face showed that the land was not subject to partition, and for that reason the judgment decreeing partition was void and subject to collateral attack. In the disposition of that case, we said:

“Where the record of a judgment shows on its face that the court did not have authority to grant the particular relief which it did grant, the judgment is void, and subject to collateral attack.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 94, 325 Mo. 881, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-dusenberg-v-rudolph-mo-1930.