Kitchens v. Union County

22 So. 2d 356, 198 Miss. 403, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 211
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1945
DocketNo. 35877.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 356 (Kitchens v. Union County) 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
Kitchens v. Union County, 22 So. 2d 356, 198 Miss. 403, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 211 (Mich. 1945).

Opinion

L. A. Smith, 'Sr., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant filed a petition in the Circuit Court of Union County, and with the board of supervisors of said county, simultaneously, seeking to have the court enter an order directing the board of supervisors to issue a warrant in his favor for the sum of $650.50, being based on a claim of 20 cents a mile for returning, as the agent of the Governor of Mississippi, two fugitives from the State of Mississippi, under a requisition from the Governor for that purpose, which requisition was issued on the capias of a justice of the peace in Union County, directing the arrest of said parties for the felony of kidnapping; The victim of the kidnapping was a girl, and the record shows that the Governor’s agent, who was also a deputy sheriff of Union County, realizing that he alone would find it exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, to' guard and return all three persons without aid, took along with him another deputy sheriff of said county, all traveling in the car of Mr. Kitchens, who was the agent appointed by the Governor, and the claimant and appellant in this cause.

They went to California, and the requisition was honored, and they brought the two prisoners and the girl back with them to Union County in November, 1943, having used eight days on the trip.

*413 Proof was duly made in support of- the allegations of the making of the trip-, and of the facts hereinabove set out; and after the presentation thereof, at which it does not appear that any one represented "the county, the circuit court denied the petition; and from this judgment of the circuit court the case has been appealed here.

Although appellant simultaneously filed his petition both in the circuit court and with the supervisors, and although there is no provision in the statutes applicable requiring that the petition to the circuit court make the members of the board of supervisors parties defendant there, and require them to be summoned, they were summoned and made parties to the petition in the circuit court. However, the summons was defective, and the return of the service thereof was defective.

Appellant contends, and we think rightly, that since it was not necessary for the supervisors to have been summoned in the first place, the defect in the summons is not material in the matter; neither is their failure to appear and contest on behalf of the county in the Circuit Court. Ex parte Charles Webb, 96 Miss. 8, 49 So. 567. However, appellant lost his ease in the circuit court, as stated.

Section 3984, Code 1942, which was Section 4826, Code 1930, provides: “The governor may appoint an agent to demand of the executive authority of any other state or territory any fugitive from justice or other person charged with treason, felony, or other crime in this state. Such agent, if necessary, may employ a sufficient guard or escort to bring such criminal to this state; and the governor may contract other expenses absolutely required in performing the duties of the agency. ’ ’

In the case of McLean v. Mississippi, 5 Cir., 96 F. (2d) 741, 745, 119 A. L. R. 670, writ of certiorari denied in 305 U. S. 623, 59 S. Ct. 84, 83 L. Ed. 399, the Court said: “Even though one who is a sheriff should be appointed such agent, he acts not as sheriff under his bond but as *414 special agent to extradite, at least until he has the prisoner in his custody in his own county.”

Section 3964, Code 1942, provides: “Any party, acting under a requisition of the governor, who brings back to this state and delivers to the sheriff of the county where the offense is alleged to have been committed, a person charged with felony, shall receive, to be paid out of the county treasury on the order of the circuit court and of the board of supervisors, twenty cents a mile for the distance necessarily traveled in coming from the place of arrest to the place of delivery; but the same shall not be paid to any party who has received, or who claims a reward from the state, county, or person,” which, like Section 3984, first appeared in the Code of 1892.

The requisition signed by Governor Paul B. Johnson appointed appellant as agent of the Governor, to receive and convey the parties from California to the State of Mississippi, without responsibility to the state for any expense attendant upon the execution, for the arrest and delivery of the fugitives.

Section 3965, Code 1942, which was adopted as Chapter 139 of the Laws of 1932, provides:

“The circuit court or the judge thereof in vacation is hereby authorized and empowered to allow all necessary and proper expenses to any person or persons acting under a requisition of the governor, who may travel out of this State for the purpose of identifying or assisting in any proper and necessary manner in the return to this State of a person charged with felony.
“Such expenses may be allowed'only upon a petition to said court or judge filed by the District Attorney, setting out the necessity for the expenditure, an estimate of the probable amount to be spent, the name of the person charged with felony, the crime with which such person is charged and the place to which the proposed trip will be made. If, upon the hearing of said petition, the circuit court or judge is satisfied of the necessity of the expenditure, an order authorizing the same may be entered to *415 that effect, and thereafter upon sworn itemized statement of such expenses the court or judge shall, if such expenses are reasonable and proper, enter an order allowing the same, which order, upon presentation to the board of supervisors of the county in which such person is charged with felony, shall be allowed by said board. ’ ’

Section 3922, Code 1942, which was Section 4365, Code of 1930, provides: ‘‘All accounts of a public nature, before they are allowed by the circuit court, shall be presented to the district attorney, and his opinion concerning the validity of the same, and whether the same should be allowed or disallowed, obtained in writing, and presented to the court.”

It is contended by the appellant that automatically under Section 3964 he is entitled to 20 cents a mile from Long Beach, California, to New Albany, the matter being fixed by statute; and that as he acted as the agent of the Governor under a statute fixing definitely the payment of this mileage to him when he had performed the purposes of his appointment, that no district, attorney can, in effect, repeal the statute where the service has been effectively performed, or hamper the agent of the Governor by recommending disapproval of the allowance, so that, therefore, Section 3965 has no application to this particular part of his claim.

The position of the attorney general, in contesting the issuance of an allowance order by the Circuit Court in this particular case, is based on Section 3922, Code 1942, supra, and Section 3965, Code 1942.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 So. 2d 356, 198 Miss. 403, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kitchens-v-union-county-miss-1945.