Gordon v. Tracy

238 S.W. 395, 194 Ky. 166, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 238 S.W. 395 (Gordon v. Tracy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Tracy, 238 S.W. 395, 194 Ky. 166, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 128 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Settle

Refusing writ.

The petitioner, Robert A. Gordon, by petition filed in this court, prays of it a writ of prohibition against the respondent, Frank M. Tracy, judge of the circuit court of the 16th judicial district of Kentucky, to prevent him, sitting as a court, from compelling the petitioner to answer a certain question or questions propounded to him' by the grand jury of Kenton county as ordered by him; and, also, from enforcing such order, if disobeyed by petitioner, by proceeding, as threatened, to punish him for contempt. The respondent filed a general demurrer and response to the petition, and the cause was thereupon submitted upon the petition, demurrer to same and response.

The facts that must be considered ,in passing .on the question presented for decision in this case are admitted by the pleadings to be as follows: The-petitioner, Robert A. Gordon, resides in the city of Covington, where he owns and conducts a drug store in which, in addition to drugs and soft drinks, he keeps for sale newspapers, magazines and other publications, including a daily publication styled the “Daily Racing Form,” which is issued from the city of Chicago, Illinois, and for the sale of which he is the sole agent in the city of Covington. His [168]*168sales of this publication amount to about one hundred and fifty copies per day, at least forty of which are distributed to regular subscribers in Kenton county and the remainder over the counter of his store to other persons living in or contiguous to Covington.

The “Daily Racing Form” publishes and furnishes its readers the racing news from all race tracks in the United 'States, Canada, Mexico and Cuba; advertises all dates of races and the entries of horses for rapes run and to be run; the wagers offered or placed on each; gives the “tips” of horsemen as to the probable winners in horse races to be run; also the pedigrees, past records and performances of horses entered as racers at the tracks where meetings are being held; ' the names of jockeys by whom they are to be mounted, and much other information, both general and specific, respecting horse racing that would prove useful to persons wishing to place wagers on such sport, even without attending the meetings at which the racing is conducted.

It further appears from the pleadings that the petitioner was duly served with a .subpoena to appear as a witness before the grand jury of Kenton county, which, then being in session, had under investigation, among other offenses against the criminal and penal laws of the state, violations of the laws thereof against gambling, especially gambling upon the racing' of horses, particularly denounced by chapter 8, Acts General Assembly, 1920. Upon the petitioner’s appearing before the grand .jury in obedience to the subpoena, and after being duly sworn as a witness by .the foreman of the grand jury he was asked by the Commonwealth’s attorney, then present in the grand jury room, to state the names of the persons to whom he was accustomed to sell or had sold the “Daily Racing Form,” which question he did not answer and told the grand jury he would not answer, unless advised by his attorney to do so. Petitioner was given an opportunity to consult his attorney, after doing which he returned to the room of the grand jury and flatly refused to answer the question previously propounded to him by the Commonwealth attorney in their presence. Thereupon, in conformity to section 108, Criminal Code, petitioner was taken by the grand jury before the respondent, Frank M. Tracy, judge of the Kenton circuit court, criminal division, whose court was then in session and he presiding as the judge thereof. The foreman of the grand jury then stated to the respondent as judge of [169]*169the court the question that had been ashed petitioner, his refusal to answer same, and the reason given by him for such refusal. Whereupon respondent, as judge of the court, informed the petitioner that he must answer the question propounded, and that his refusal to do so, if persisted in, would result in his being proceeded against by respondent for .a contempt of court. Persisting in his refusal to answer the question, petitioner at once filed in this court his petition for the writ of prohibition.

It is insisted for the petitioner that the question ashed him before the grand jury was one the court was without authority to compel him to answer, (1) because the act, violations of which the grand jury were seeking of him evidence by the question propounded, is unconstitutional; (2) that to have answered it by furnishing the names of persons who purchased of him the “Daily Racing Form” would probably result in the loss to him of their patronage and thereby injure his business; (3) the information demanded thereby would have been incomipetent as evidence for any purpose. As to the first of these contentions it is sufficient to say that as the petitioner was in no way affected by the act of 1920, or the investigation being conducted by the grand jury under it, his objection to its constitutionality, if it had been made before the respondent, could not have been considered by the latter, nor can it now be considered by us; for it has repeatedly been held by this court that one who is unaffected hy the provisions of a statute will not be heard to complain that it is unconstitutional. Marshall v. Donovan, 73 Ky. 689; Commonwealth v. Wright, 79 Ky. 22; Cooley’s Constitutional Lim., section 164.

It is not made to appear from anything stated in the petition that the grand jury was or is attempting to indict the petitioner for any violation of the act of 1920, nor does it appear from the record that he has violated any provision of the act. But if by any possibility an indictment against him could result from his furnishing the grand jury the testimony demanded of him, he couid not be prosecuted under it, because the act expressly provides: .

“In any prosecution under this act, or in any investigation by an examining court or grand jury, it ’Shall be no exemption for a witness that his testimony may criminate himself, but no such testimony given by the witness shall be used against him in any prosecution except for false swearing or perjury, and he shall be discharged [170]*170from liability for any violation of the law on his part disclosed by his testimony, nor shall any person against whom he testifies be permitted to prove similar violations upon the part' of such witness.”

It is clear from these provisions of the act, supra, that they render the petitioner immune to any prosecution by reason of his violation of any of them that might be disclosed by his testimony.

We regard the petitioner’s second contention also unsound. One cannot be excused from giving testimony respecting violations of the criminal or penal laws of the state upon the ground that to do bo would injure him in his business or in the estimation of his friends; for these are minor considerations that must yield to the public good, and a constitutional provision that “no person shall be compelled to furnish evidence against himself,” does not relate to questions of property, or business, or to the protection of other persons by the witness. As well said in 28 R. C. L., section 12.:

“Constitutional provisions protecting witnesses from being compelled to give self-incriminating evidence afford a shield which is personal to the witness, designed for their own protection, and not' for the protection of others.

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Bluebook (online)
238 S.W. 395, 194 Ky. 166, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-tracy-kyctapp-1922.