Ex Parte Hansen v. Edwards

240 S.W. 489, 210 Mo. App. 35, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 178
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 240 S.W. 489 (Ex Parte Hansen v. Edwards) 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 Hansen v. Edwards, 240 S.W. 489, 210 Mo. App. 35, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 178 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

The petitioner is held by respondents under a warrant issued by the governor o.f Missouri upon a requisition from the governor of Kansas and seeks to gain his liberty by this proceeding in habeas corpus. The petition for the writ alleges that petitioner is being unlawfully held on account of the fact that said warrant, a copy of which is attached to the petition, was unlawfully issued and void for three reasons: .First, the requisition was not sufficient because the county attorney of Wyandotte county, Kansas, who applied to the governor of Kansas for the requisition, did not state in his application whether or not this petitioner was under civil or criminal arrest in the State of Missouri, “the fact of such arrest, if any, and the nature of the proceed *37 ing on which it was based; ’ ’ second, because the petitioner at the time of the issuance of the warrant by the governor of Missouri was under arrest and under a $10,000 bond to appear in a justice court in Jackson County, Missouri; third, because at the time of the issuance of the requisition and warrant and on the 15th day of March, 1921, the date alleged in the complaint uppn which the request for the requisition was made and the date upon which petitioner is alleged to have committed the crime, he was not in the state of Kansas but was in the state of Missouri and such was the situation a number of days prior to such date and a number of days thereafter.

On the filing by respondents of their return this court heard evidence upon the 'issues raised. The petitioner introduced in evidence copies of all the extradition papers in this ease, these papers consist of a request upon the governor of Kansas by the county attorney of Wyandotte County, Kansas, for the issuance of a requisition upon the governor of Missouri for the apprehension and rendition of the petitioner, stating that the petitioner stood charged by a complaint pending in the North City Court of Wyandotte County, Kansas, of the crime of counseling, aiding and abetting the commission of the crime of embezzlement committed in county of Wyandotte, State of Kansas; that since the commission of the offense the petitioner has fled from the justice of the State of Kansas and was confined in the city jail at Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri. The-request of the county attorney alleges other formal matters. To these papers is attached a copy of the complaint which is sworn to by E, M. Darnall. This complaint states that in Wyandotte County, Kansas, on or about the 15th of March, 1921, one Connie Gordon Blalock, then and there an agent and employee of Armour & Company, a corporation, and by virtue of such employment did receive and take into his possession and under his care certain personal property, to wit: meat products consist *38 ing of ham, pork butts, pork loins, spare-ribs and pork trimmings of the value of $299.40 belonging to said Armour & Company, and charged said Blalock with embezzling such property and that “at the county and state aforesaid, and on the 15th day of March, 1921, the defendant, G. F. Hansen (the petitioner) then and there unlawfully, wilfully and feloniously counseled, assisted, aided and abetted the said -Connie Gordon Blalock the said embezzlement aforesaid to do and commit.”

Attached to the papers introduced in evidence by the petitioner is another affidavit of Darnall in which the affiant states — “ . . . that beginning in the month of October, 1920, and continuing up and until and during the month of June, 1921, said Connie Gordon Blalock, an employee of Armour and Company, was counseled, aided and abetted by one C. F. Hansen and together they embezzled from said Armour & Co. meat products consisting of hams, pork butts, pork loins, spareribs and pork trimmings, of approximately the value of $20,000; that on the 15th day of March, 1921, the said Connie Gordon Blalock with the assistance, help and cooperation of the said C. F. Hansen, embezzled from said Armour & Co. meat products of the approximate value of $299.40.”

The petitioner placed Darnall upon the witness stand and showed by his testimony that Darnall based his accusation that the petitioner was in the State of Kansas on March 15,1921, upon the confession of certain other employees of Armour & Company, and that Darnall had no personal knowledge of the presence of this applicant in the State of Kansas on that day.

The great weight of the testimony introduced in evidence was to the effect that the petitioner was not in the State of Kansas on March 15, 1921, but whether this is conclusively established by the evidence we need not say, but for the purposes of this case we will assume that the evidence is uncontradicted that the petitioner was not in the State of Kansas on that date. The petitioner testified that for the past twelve years he had been a resident of Kansas City, Missouri, and that prac *39 tically all of that time he had been engaged in the grocery and meat business in that city; that on the 15th day of March, 1921, and some time previous and subsequent to that day, his place of business was situated about one mile from the packing plant of Armour & Company, in Kansas City, Kansas; that he was the owner of an automobile and that one could go by automobile from his place of business to Armour & Co. in fifteen minutes ; that March 15, 1921, was on Tuesday; that he was not at Armour & Company during that week but that he had been there during* the previous week and had transacted business with Blalock at that time; that for one year prior to the week in which March 15, 1921, occurred he had gone to the packing plant of Armour & Company and purchased meat, sometimes from Blalock and sometimes from other employees; that he often ordered meat from Blalock over the phone and might have talked to him by phone on March 15, 1921; that after the week in which March 15, 1921, occurred he visited the packing plant of Armour & Company in Kansas City, Kansas, about once a week and purchased meat in the same manner and from the same persons as before that week.

On the back of the requisition is contained printed information to the effect that the governor of New York in 1887 issued a call in which he was joined by the governors of surrounding States for a conference of delegates to be appointed by the governors of all the States and territories for the purpose of adopting a uniform system of rules and practices in interstate extradition; that the conference met in New York in that year and was attended by representatives from some twenty-five States and territories; that among the rules adopted in regard to extradition was one as follows: “F. If the fugitive is known to be under either civil or criminal arrest in the State or territory to which he is alleged to have fled, the fact of such arrest and the nature of the proceedings on which it is based must be stated” (in the requisition).

We think there is no merit in the first point made by the petitioner to the effect that the requisition was *40 not sufficient because it did not state whether the accused was under civil or criminal arrest in the State of Missouri. There is nothing in the federal statutes governing the subject of requisitions (Sec. 5278, R. S. Stat. of U. S. Comp. Stat., par.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 S.W. 489, 210 Mo. App. 35, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-hansen-v-edwards-moctapp-1922.