Key v. State Ex Rel. Hodge

1924 OK 210, 224 P. 549, 101 Okla. 211, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 64
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 19, 1924
Docket15099
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1924 OK 210 (Key v. State Ex Rel. Hodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Key v. State Ex Rel. Hodge, 1924 OK 210, 224 P. 549, 101 Okla. 211, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 64 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

LYDICK, J.

On January 9, 1924, the State of Oklahoma ex rel. John L. Hodge, county attorney of Carter county, Okla., filed a petition in the district court of .that county, naming Emmett Key, Gus Key, and J. A. Bodovitz as defendants. The parties are referred to herein according to the position they occupied in the lower court. In the petition, it is alleged that the defendant Bodovitz is the owner of a certain building at 113 Broadway in Ardmore; that he rents same to Emmett Key and Gus Key, ■ defendants, who ostensibly use same for the purpose of operating a drug store therein known as the Key Drug Company, but that in truth and in fact, and with the knowledge and consent of defendant Bodovitz, they are engaged in carrying on therein an illegal traffic in intoxicating liquor. Now claiming in this court to have acted under section 7022, Compiled Statutes, 1921, in relation to the enforcement of the prohibitory law, the state sought an injunction against defendants, by the terms of which the sheriff should seize and close the building referred to. Immediately upon the filing of the petition and without the issuance of summons or even the filing of a praecipe therefor, and without notice to or knowledge of the defendants, the county attorney presented the petition to the district court. The county attorney produced no evidence to support his petition, except the petition itself, verified by one John W. Ginn. There is nothing in *212 the record to show who John W. Ginn may be, and if he 'knew anything about the facts, which he unqualifiedly verified in the petition, he failed to testify to them as a witness in the later trial of the case.

The court, in January 9, 1924, in this strictly ex parte hearing, issued what it termed a “temporary restraining order,” hy the terms of which the sheriff was directed to seize, lock, and close this building, and prevent defendants from entering upon said premises or using same for any purposes whatsoever. In said order, it is recited that “on the ISth day of January, 1924, and at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., be and the same is hereby set as the date and time for hearing thereof.” As later disclosed in the record, the court intended that hearing to he a final one, for the determination of whether a permanent injunction should issue, giving defendants only nine days to prepare for same. The order provided that a copy thereof be served upon the defendants.

On January 11, 1924, the Supreme Court, upon petition filed herein by the defendants, prohibited the enforcement' of that restraining order until defendants could be heard thereon in the district court. On the next day, January 12th, the defendants jointly filed a motion in the district court to dismiss the case, for the reason that no summons was served, alleging therein that they were “not submitting themselves to the jurisdiction of the court.” The county attorney contended that the issuance of summons was unnecessary. On January 18th, the court overruled this motion to dismiss. The defendants excepted and asked for time to plead, which request the court summarily denied and ordered the case then and there to final trial. Thereupon the defendants filed a motion to vacate the order of injunction. The enforcement or same had been prohibited by the judgment of the Supreme Court until the defendants could be heard in the district court. The motion of the defendants sought to vacate the injunction upon jurisdictional grounds to wit, the failure to have issued a summons in the case, and joined with it also non-jurisdictional grounds, to wit, that they had not been guilty of any violation of the law set up in the plaintiff’s petition. The court proceeded to hear this motic n; testimony was produced showing that no summons had been issued. The county attorney introduced evidence showing that, a day or two after this petition had been filed and the building closed hy temporary injunction, Guy Sigler, attorney for defendants, walked into the district court room and asked the judge of the court something about when these cases would be heard, and contended that the defendants thereby waived the issuance and service of summons. The court, evidently being of the same opinion, overruled the motion to vacate. Thereupon the court overruled the protest of defendants that they be given time to plead and to prepare for trial, and summarily proceeded to try the case upon its merits nine days after the suit had been filed and without the issuance of summons therein.

The only competent and material evidence produced by the state is as follows: A hired itinerant detective, a stranger to (he jurisdiction of that court, testified to the effect that on January 5, 1924, he bought of the defendant Emmett Key, at the drug store involved, a drink and a half-pint of corn whisky for $4.50. Two deputy sheriffs said that on an uncertain date, a year or .so before, they had entered this drug store and seized two half gallon jars of corn whisky. The county attorney performed the usually undifficult task of having the deputy sheriffs testify that the place which they raided had a bad reputation. The state itself offered no evidence to show that the defendants Emmett Key and Gus Key owned or had anything to do with the operation of the drug store or other business in the building, but the omission was cured by the defendants proving these facts in making their defense. There was no evidence to show that the defendant Bodovitz had any knowledge whatsoever of the keeping or sale of any liquor in that place of 'business. Some testimony was given to the effect that the place had been closed once before by injunction, but wo cannot know whether that judgment of the court was based on as little evidence as we find in the case at bar. The foregoing constitutes the state’s proof.

It is true that, over the persistent objections made by attorney for defendnts, the court permitted 15 typewritten pages of testimony by the sheriff, in which he related information that he gained from reading “a bunch of letters from other peace officers over the state and in Kansas” concerning the good work done by the detective witness. Benham, and what others had told him over long distance telephone and otherwise concerning that witness: conversations passing from time to time between the sheriff and this detective—what whisky the detective had seized in other places, and brought to the jail and county attorney’s office, what instructions the sheriff had given him from time to time, what this witness had told the sheriff about what he had done at defendants’ place of *213 business, and divers and sundry other statements and actions, all without the presence and hearing of the defendants, and incompetent and immaterial under every known rule of evidence applicable thereto. On cross-examination, the witness Benham pointed to a man in the court room other than Emmett Key as the man from whom he had purchased this half pint of wliisfky, and who he testified was Emmett Key. However, when attorney for defendants sought to cross-examine this witness upon this very material point as to the identification of the man he claimed had sold him the whisky, the county attorney objected, and the court, from the bench, said: “If that is all Mr. Sigler has, let him play with it,” but instantly changed his mind and directed attorney for the defendants to proceed otherwise. Likewise, the court refused the attorney for defendants permission to cross-examine witness Ben-ham as to how and in what manner he paid the $4.50 for the corn whisky, and otherwise seriously circumscribed the rights of the defendants in that regard.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 210, 224 P. 549, 101 Okla. 211, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/key-v-state-ex-rel-hodge-okla-1924.