Moore v. Jarvis

8 P.2d 818, 44 Wyo. 92, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 9
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1932
Docket1758
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 818 (Moore v. Jarvis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Jarvis, 8 P.2d 818, 44 Wyo. 92, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 9 (Wyo. 1932).

Opinion

BiNER, Justice.

This matter is here upon the petition of Clifford C. Moore — who will be referred to herein either as the “petitioner,” the “defendant” or by his name — for a writ of habeas corpus directed to Dick Jarvis as Sheriff of Camp *95 bell County, "Wyoming, wbo, it is claimed in said petition, is unlawfully restraining the petitioner of his liberty. To this petition, the Attorney General of the State of Wyoming has made answer on behalf of the respondent and petitioner has questioned the sufficiency thereof as upon demurrer. The personal production and presence of the petitioner at the hearing had upon the issues thus joined was waived by his counsel and petitioner’s ultimate right to the writ is the question now to be determined.

The situation disclosed by the pleadings is substantially as follows: Some time prior to the third day of February, 1931, the County Attorney of Campbell County, Wyoming, filed in the District 'Court of said county a petition entitled “State of Wyoming on the relation of Earl Dunlap, County and Prosecuting Attorney of Campbell County, Wyoming, Plaintiff v. Clifford C. Moore, alias C. C. Moore, alias Cliff Moore, alias ‘Dr. Pete’ Moore, Defendant,” wherein the abatement of an alleged nuisance on certain described property and an injunction order was sought against said defendant. On the date above mentioned, the cause came on for final hearing, all parties being then duly represented by counsel. After the introduction of evidence and the conclusion of the hearing, the court found “that the material allegations in said petition are true and that the defendant has been guilty of maintaining a nuisance in operation of gambling games and the sale of intoxicating liquor in the premises known as the Perkins Building, or Moore and Moore Pastime and located on Lot Fourteen of Block Seven of the First Addition to the town of Gillette, Campbell County, Wyoming, and that the nuisance should be abated and the defendant, Clifford C. Moore, should be permanently enjoined from continuing to violate the intoxicating liquor laws and the gambling laws of the State of Wyoming. ’ ’ Pursuant to this finding, a decree granting the relief asked by plaintiff’s petition under date of February 3, 1931, was entered to the effect that “the said defendant be and he is hereby, together with his agents, servants and employes, *96 permanently restrained and enjoined from operating or conducting gambling games and from trafficking in intoxicating liquor in violation of the laws of the State of Wyoming in or upon said premises or elsewhere within the Seventh Judicial District of the State of Wyoming” and that the Sheriff close “said building or place” against its use for such purposes for one year unless sooner released by order of court. No proceedings to review this decree were ever prosecuted.

Subsequently and on the seventh day of September, 1931, the County Attorney of Campbell County, filed in the District Court aforesaid, a sworn information consisting of nine paragraphs denominated “counts” wherein and whereby the court was apprised in substance that Clifford C. Moore, the above named defendant “in the said Campbell County in the State of Wyoming, at and within a certain building located on Lot 1, Block 2, Park Addition to the town of Gillette, Campbell County, Wyoming, by himself, his agents or other persons in privity with the said Clifford C. Moore,” knowingly and unlawfully and contrary to the injunction order above described and while it was in force and effect, did certain acts which are particularly enumerated. These acts which were charged to have been committed, commencing on August 1, 1931, and concluding on September 5, 1931, occurring also on sundry other specified days intervening the dates mentioned, consisted of the repeated sale to divers persons named, of intoxicating liquors and the possession for sale of considerable quantities thereof.

This information was duly served on Moore on September 7, 1931, and on September 9 following, he entered a plea of not guilty thereto. Thereafter, another judge than the one who had entered the injunction decree was assigned to try the issues thus made, a hearing was had and the defendant was “found guilty of the offense charged in the information, to-wit: That of contempt of court.” It was thereupon adjudged that defendant pay a fine of $600.00 *97 and costs and that he be committed to jail until fine and costs were paid or he was otherwise legally discharged. No proceedings to obtain a review of this judgment by the usual methods of error proceedings or direct appeal were ever prosecuted. The relief here sought is from the restraint imposed upon the defendant in consequence of his failure to pay the fine thus adjudged.

This court in Miskimmins v. Shaver, 8 Wyo. 392, 58 Pac. 411, 415, 49 L. R. A. 831, a case involving the legality of contempt proceedings, has said concerning the writ of habeas corpus that:

“The writ is not in the nature of, nor is it to be used as a substitute for, proceedings in error. A finding or decision of the inferior court, no matter how erroneous, if it does not affect its jurisdiction, is not subject to attack in this collateral proceeding. The office of the writ is to determine the legality of the particular imprisonment, and the facts to be considered in determining that question are jurisdictional facts. If upon a consideration of such facts, it appears that the court exceeded its jurisdiction in making the order, the petitioner will be discharged upon habeas corpus, and it is not material that the questions might have been brought to this court by petition in error. ’ ’

Several years antedating .the decision thus mentioned, in the case of In re Wright, 3 Wyo. 478, 27 Pac. 565, 568, 13 L. R. A. 748, 31 Am. St. Rep. 94, the court had also declared that, while it did “not favor the practice of looking into the constitutionality of this statute in habeas corpus proceedings, ’ ’ mentioning the rule announced in some jurisdictions to the effect that such a question must be tested by appeal, writ of error or trial in the appropriate court, remarked further:

“But the Supreme Court of the United States in Ex parte Siebold, 100 U. S. 371, (25 L. Ed. 717), has established a different doctrine; and this seems now to be the rule in habeas corpus, as the learned author of the work above cited states: ‘But we apprehend the true rule to be that *98 when a prisoner alleges that the law under which he was convicted and sentenced is unconstitutional, or has been repealed before the trial and judgment, he may have these matters passed upon by the highest judicial tribunals, whether the attack upon the judgment be collateral, as by habeas corpus, or direct, as by appeal or writ of error.’ Church Hab. Corp. Sec. 570.”

It would seem clear that the quoted excerpt from the author mentioned, embodies the prevailing doctrine in this country a.t this time, 29 C. J. 35 and cases cited in Note 48.

It is here contended for petitioner that the District Court was without authority in law to enter the injunction decree aforesaid in that § 22, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 818, 44 Wyo. 92, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-jarvis-wyo-1932.