Ex Parte Kirby

130 S.E. 86, 100 W. Va. 70, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 218
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1925
Docket5556
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 130 S.E. 86 (Ex Parte Kirby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Kirby, 130 S.E. 86, 100 W. Va. 70, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 218 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

HatcheR, Judge:

Upon the petition of Ira Kirby and seventeen others, a writ of Habeas Corpus issued from this court to the sheriff of Taylor county requiring him to show cause why the petitioners are detained. The return of the sheriff states that he arrested and detains the petitioners by virtue of a writ of the circuit court of said county, dated Sept. 18, 1925, which directed him so to do. From that writ and the other exhibits in the case, it appears that a rule was issued on Sept. 2, 1925, by the judge of said circuit court in vacation, and served on thirteen of the petitioners, requiring them to appear before him on Nov. 9, 1925, that being the first day of the next regular term of said court, then to answer the alleged violation of an injunction order of the said judge; and that upon an affidavit charging seventeen of the petitioners with a subsequent violation of the injunction, another order was entered by said judge in vacation, on Sept. 18, 1925, directing an attachment to issue against seventeen of the petitioners. This *72 attachment was also made returnable Nov. 9, 1925. The order provided that bail could be had by each of the contemnors in the sum of $500.00.

The petitioner Andy Workman, is not named in either the order of the court or the writ issued pursuant thereto by the clerk. The relief prayed for is therefore granted him.

Counsel for petitioners contend (1) that the attachment is virtually a commitment to jail without a hearing and is unlawful because it was not preceeded by a rule; and (2) that the circuit judge had the right to summarily try the petitioners in vacation, and the postponement of the hearing until Nov. 9, 1925, violated the constitutional right of the petitioners to a trial without unreasonable delay.

First. We are cited Ex Parte Mylius, 61 W. Va., 405; State v. Irwin, 30 W. Va. 421 and Morris v. Creel, 1 Va. Cases, 333, as decisions holding that a rule to show cause must be served before attachment issues. In those cases the petitioners, without a hearing, had severally been adjudged guilty of contempt and attachments had issued. So far as the holding of the court applied to the facts in each case, it was correct; but it does not apply to every contempt case. The history of contempt proceedings shows that the law concedes to judges and courts the inherent right and authority to issue an attachment in the first instance, without an antecedent rule, where the case is urgent or the contempt is flagrant. 13 C. J. par. 93, p. 68-69. In the case of Rex v. Earl Ferrers, 1 Burr 631, decided in 1758, the court of the King’s Bench issued an attachment on an affidavit without a rule to show cause, against even so important a person in that day, as a peer of England, he, according to the affidavit, having disobeyed an order of the court. Thomas v. Cummins, 3 Penn. 1 decided in 1791, asseverated this authority in the following brief opinion:

“Mr. Sergeant pro quer, moved for a rule to show cause on the defendant why an attachment should not issue against him, upon an affidavit that a writ of estrepement had been served on him in this cause, and that he had afterwards declared he *73 would go on committing waste, notwithstanding the power of the justices.
The court declared that they need not in such case give a rule to show cause, but upon such highly improper expressions would grant the attachment in the first instance, the defendant having set at naught the powers of the court; and the attachment was accordingly issued.”

This right is reiterated in the more recent case of Petrie v. People, 40 Ill. 334:

“Where the defendant in a suit in chancery for divorce neglects to obey an order therein to pay alimony pendente lite, an attachment may be issued against him for contempt, without any notice to him that an attachment would be asked, or any rule to show cause why it should not be issued.”

While the usual practice in West Virginia is .to issue a rule to show cause in the first instance, the right to issue an attachment without a rule, is stated in State v. Frew and Hart, 24 W. Va. 416.

“Where a contempt is not committed in open court, the usual course is to issue a rule to show cause why an attachment should not issue, though the attachment sometimes issues in the first instance. ’ ’

This right is also distinctly recognized by the Legislature in section 27, ch. 147 of the Code, which limits the right of courts to punish for contempts in some cases, but leaves them untrammeled in case of “disobedience — to any lawful process, judgment, decree or order of the said court.”

The injunction in this case had been issued for the purpose of allaying trouble in an industrial struggle. By reason of the gravity of the situation, a violation of that injunction demanded quick redress. A rule to show cause for a prior violation had already been served on thirteen of those attached. If they were guilty of a second and wilfull disobed *74 ience of the injunction, as the affidavit filed with the judge asserts, their contempt was indeed flagrant. The judge had the authority therefore, without a preceding rule, to direct the attachment of those named in his order. The attachment herein is merely the 'process of the court, and serves the same purpose as a warrant or other writ whereby an accused is apprehended and held for trial. The order directing the attachment does not purport to find the petitioners guilty, but extends to them an opportunity to be heard on Nov. 9th., wherein it is different from the cases of Ex pa/rte Mylius and the other eases cited in which the circuit court had determined the guilt of the offenders without giving them a hearing.

Second. By virtue of section 27, chapter 147 of the Code, Petrie v. Buffington, 79 W. Va. 113, specifically declares that the judge of the circuit court may hear contempt cases in vacation:

“A judge of a circuit court has authority, in vacation of the court, to punish for a contempt for a disobedience to a lawful order of such court.”

Having the authority to try petitioners summarily, has the delay in this proceeding caused the lower court to lose its jurisdiction? We are mindful of the constitutional right of the accused to a trial without unreasonable delay. We are not unmindful that it is an outstanding principle of the common law that no man may be unreasonably detained in prison without a trial. Yet it is an equally well established principle that the peace and security of the people require that one who has become a menace thereto be detained upon a mere charge of crime. The law has harmonized these two principles by according to the State the right to hold in custody one accused of crime, upon the express guaranty of a speedy trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 S.E. 86, 100 W. Va. 70, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-kirby-wva-1925.