Hanna v. State Ex Rel. Rice

153 So. 371, 169 Miss. 314, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 57
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1934
DocketNo. 31034.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 153 So. 371 (Hanna v. State Ex Rel. Rice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanna v. State Ex Rel. Rice, 153 So. 371, 169 Miss. 314, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 57 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

*318 Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree in a contempt proceeding wherein the appellant is charged with having disobeyed a writ of injunction. The attorney-general filed a bill of complaint against the appellant and another under chapter 93, Laws of 1932, alleging, in substance, that the defendants, who were engaged in business as wholesale dealers and distributors of gasoline under a permit therefor, had violated the permit, in that they had failed to pay taxes on gasoline sold; prayed “for a writ of injunction to restrain the defendants herein from doing business as a distributor or wholesale dealer in gasoline in the state of Mississippi, and that upon final hearing hereof a decree be entered declaring the said defendants forfeit all rights to do business in the state of Mississippi as a distributor or wholesale dealer of gasoline for a period of five years,” and for a judgment for the amount of taxes alleged to be due, together with the statutory penalty for .failure to pay the ame.

The bill was sworn to by a statutory special agent of the attorney-general, and set forth that “the matters and things set forth in the foregoing bill of complaint are true and correct as therein stated to the best of affiant’s belief and knowledge.” A fiat was granted, directing that the “injunction issue as prayed for in the original bill an *319 nexed hereto, commanding and enjoining the said defendants, C. B. Hanna and L. Li. Mabry, from doing business as a distributor or wholesale dealer in gasoline, and enjoining the said defendants from selling, or in any way disposing of any gasoline he now has on hand until the excise tax due by the defendants to the state of Mississippi, and penalties thereon, be paid in full, and until said defendants shall have secured a permit to do such business as required by law.” The writ issued on this fiat followed its provisions.

The original of the writ, and the sheriff's return thereon, were lost, but counsel for the complainant and defendants agreed in writing as to.the contents of the writ, ‘ ‘ and that the same was delivered to the sheriff of Madison county, Mississippi, and was properly and personally served on the defendants, O. B. Hanna and L. L. Mabry.”

In due course a decree pro confesso was rendered on this bill of complaint, but the record does not disclose that any final decree has been rendered. Several days after the rendition of the decree pro confesso a petition for leave to file an information against the defendants to the bill of complaint was filed by the attorney-general, which embodied the information desired to be filed, and which, after setting forth the filing of the bill of complaint, the issuance of the injunction, the service thereof on the defendants continued, in substance, as follows: Shortly after the filing’ of the bill of complaint an. order was made by the court at the joint request of the attorney-general and the defendants for the sale of the gasoline by the sheriff at public auction, which order was afterwards set aside on the joint application of the attorney-general and the defendants. Thereafter a written-agreement was entered into between the attorney-general and the defendants, one of the stipulations of which is as follows: “That the said C. B. Hanna and L. L. Mabry, trading as Hanna and Mabry, with the consent *320 and approval of P. R. Williamson, sheriff of Madison county, Mississippi, may sell at private sale, in whole or in part, the gasoline now stored in their tanks at Canton, Mississippi, at a price not less than ten cents (10c) per gallon and that the proceeds of such sale shall be paid to the said P. R. Williamson, sheriff, and held by him to be applied on any indebtedness adjudged to be due the state of Mississippi on account of excise taxes claimed in the suit filed by the state of Mississippi on the relation of the attorney-general v. C. B. Hanna and L. L. Mabry, trading as Planna and Mabry, in the chancery court of Madison county, Mississippi, and numbered--on the general docket of that court, and that such disposition of said gasoline and dealings therewith, shall not be construed as a violation of the injunction issued in said cause, provided an accurate accounting and proceeds of such sale is promptly made to the aforesaid sheriff, when such sales are made, failure to comply or turn over such proceeds to the sheriff leaves the aforesaid injunction in full force and effect.” The appellant then proceeded to sell gasoline at retail, but has failed to pay over the proceeds thereof to the sheriff.

' The prayer of the information, leave to file which was requested, is that the defendants “be required to appear before this court to show cause why they should not be punished .according to law for violation of said injunction.” On the order of the chancellor a citation was issued, returnable before him in vacation on May 27, 1933, on which day the parties appeared before the chancellor and the following proceedings were had: No leave to file the requested information was given, but the case was proceeded with on the theory that the request therefor itself constituted the information, and will be hereinafter so dealt with. The appellant and Mabry filed a demurrer to the information, which, on motion of the attorney-general, was stricken from the files, whereupon they filed a *321 motion to quash the writ of injunction, which was also overruled. The attorney-general then, with leave of the court, amended the information by striking therefrom all reference to the agreement for the sale of the gasoline. The appellant, over his objection, was introduced by the attorney-general as a witness, and was forced to disclose that he had sold gasoline after service on him of the writ of injunction, and that he had not turned over the proceeds of the sales to the sheriff. The appellant then introduced in evidence, among other things, the agreement for the sale of the gasoline, and gave as an excuse for not turning over the proceeds thereof to the sheriff that most of the sales were made on credit, and that collections therefor had not been made.

The decree dismisses the proceeding as to Mabry, adjudges the appellant to have violated the injunction, to be thereby in contempt of court, and remanded him to the custody of the sheriff to be by him kept in jail until he (the appellant) should purge himself of the contempt by paying into court two hundred seventy-nine dollars, for which the court found he had sold gasoline pursuant to his agreement with the attorney-general.

The appellant’s contentions are:

1. The chancellor was without power to hear and determine this matter in vacation.

2. The writ of injunction was not served on him.

3. The bill omits two essential allegations.

4. The fiat for the injunction should not have been granted on a bill sworn to on information and belief.

5. The injunction is void, for the reason that it is broader than the statute permits, and for which the bill prays.

6. He should not have been forced over his objection to testify against himself.

7. He should have been acquitted because of the attorney-general’s agreement for the sale of the gasoline.

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Bluebook (online)
153 So. 371, 169 Miss. 314, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanna-v-state-ex-rel-rice-miss-1934.