Ex Parte Ople v. Weinbrenner

226 S.W. 256, 285 Mo. 365, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 13, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 256 (Ex Parte Ople v. Weinbrenner) 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 Ople v. Weinbrenner, 226 S.W. 256, 285 Mo. 365, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 171 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

These three cases are original proceedings in this court, begun to obtain the discharge by *369 writs of habeas corpus of the petitioners from the custody of the respondent Weinbrenner, Sheriff of the City of St. Louis, by whom the petitioners were alleged to be unlawfully restrained of their liberty and imprisoned.

The petitions for the writs were filed July 13, 1920. They state in substance that the respondent holds the respective petitioners in custody in order that they may be transported to Madison County, Illinois, by virtue of warrants issued July 7th, by Honorable Wallace Crossley, at that time Acting Governor of .the State of Missouri, which warrants recited that the Governor of Illinois had demanded of the Governor of this State said Joseph Ople, Earl Miller and Leo Clyne as fugitives from the justice of the State of Illinois, and had produced to said Wallace Crossley, Acting Governor of Missouri, complaints and affidavits, certified to be authentic, and charging said fugitives with having committed the crime of murder. Wherefore, said Wallace Crossley, Acting Governor of the State of Missouri, commanded the sheriff or marshals of .any county of this State to arrest the accused persons and deliver them to Julius C. Blake, agent of the State of Illinois to receive them; also commanded all sheriffs, marshals, constables and police officers to whom -the 'warrants might be shown to assist in the execution of them and to make return on the warrants of their proceedings thereunder. The warrants were duly signed by the Acting Governor and sealed with the great seal of this State, attested by John L. Sullivan, Secretary of State.

- The arrest of the prisoners under the executive warrants and their detention are alleged in the proceedings for the writs of habeas corpus to be illegal for several reasons, but the only ones relied on and argued for the petitioners are that they .were not in the State of Illinois on the 20th day of May, 1920, the date alleged as the date of the commission of the crime of which they are charged, that they are not fugitives from said *370 State of Illinois, and that the criminal proceedings against them were instituted pursuant to a malicious conspiracy and for an unlawful purpose.

The requisitions issued by the Governor of Illinois on the Governor of Missouri, and the petitions of J. P. Streuher, the State’s Attorney of said Madison County, on which those requisitions were based, together with copies of the verified complaints wherein the petitioners were charged with the crime of murder were sufficient in form and substance to justify the Governor, or Acting Governor, of this State, to issue warrants for the arrest of the petitioners and their delivery to the agent or messenger of Illinois appointed to receive them.

The complaints against them were made, one by William O. Cline and one- by William P. Martin, both the affiants being of the County of Madison, State of Ulinois, and both purporting to prosecute in the name and by the authority of the people of said state; and they were made before J. B. Dale, a justice of the peace of said county, and were to the effect that the petitioners on the 20th day of May, 1920, in said County of Madison, willfully, feloniously and with malice aforethought killed and. murdered Clarence W. Turner by shooting him. The complaints are in all particulars sufficient to charge the petitioners with the crime of murder in the first degree in killing said Turner in said County of Madison on the date alleged, and were verified by the oaths of the respective affiants.

The petitions, verified by the affidavit, of J. P. Streuher, which accompanied the requisitions from the Governor of Illinois, set forth that Ople, Miller and Clyne stood charged with the crime of murder committed in said County of Madison on said 20th day of May, as shown by the attached copies of the complaints against them; that they had fled from the State of Illinois and were now, as affiant believed, in St. Louis, Missouri, fugitives from the justice of the State of Illinois. The petitions of Streuber prayed that requisitions for *371 the accused might be issued by the Governor of Illinois to the Governor of Missouri; and that Julius C. Blake of the said County of Madison might be appointed by the Governor of Illinois to go after and return said fugitives to the said County of Madison of the State of Illinois for trial.

The various documents before us are in duplicate, that is to say, the proceedings to procure the extradition of Ople were against him alone, but the proceedings against Miller and Clyne were against them jointly, and in each of the two proceedings the documents are identical except as to the names of the parties and the complaining affiants.

In the returns to our writs of habeas corpus, the respondent, Weinbrenner, after saying the three petitioners had been arrested on June 25, 1920, and taken into custody by him by virtue of warrants issued by Division No. 2 of the Court of Criminal Correction of said city of St. Louis, pursuant to an affidavit made in said court, charging the petitioners with the aforesaid murder of Turner, and with having afterwards fled from Illinois, go on to say that while the petitioners were still in such custody, the Govennor of Missouri, on July 7, 1920, issued warrants commanding any sheriF or marshal of the State of Missouri to arrest said prisoners and deliver them to Julius C. Blake, the agent of the State of Illinois to receive them. Copies of said warrants of the Acting Governor of Missouri are attached to the returns.

Respondent further returned that pursuant to said orders of said Division No. 2 of the Court of Criminal Correction of St. Louis, the petitioners were turned over to the jailer of St. Louis to be. held in custody subject to the orders of the said court; and that the petitioners were in the custody of the jailer when the writs of habeas corpus were served on the respondent.

By way of reply to the returns, the petitioners asserted that although they were in the jail of the City of *372 St. Louis -when the writs of habeas corpus were issued, yet, nevertheless, they were in the custody of the respondent as sheriff of said city, and were held by him for delivery to the aforesaid agent of Illinois under the warrants of the Acting Governor of this State. The reply then repeats the several grounds asserted to make the arrest and detention of the petitioners unlawful, and to entitle them to their discharge, which were alleged in the petitions for our writs.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 256, 285 Mo. 365, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-ople-v-weinbrenner-mo-1920.