Ramer v. State

128 N.E. 440, 190 Ind. 124, 1920 Ind. LEXIS 90
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1920
DocketNo. 23,568
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 128 N.E. 440 (Ramer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramer v. State, 128 N.E. 440, 190 Ind. 124, 1920 Ind. LEXIS 90 (Ind. 1920).

Opinion

Ewbank, J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment imposing upon the appellant a fine for an alleged contempt of court in disobeying a restraining order against him, issued at the suit of the appellee Sefton. Said appellee, the plaintiff in a civil action seeking an injunction, filed with the court his affidavit, entitled with the names of the plaintiff and defendant in that action, as set out below, charging that the appellant had done certain acts in violation of the restraining order,- and upon a hearing the court adjudged appellant guilty, and entered in its order book a finding and judgment under the title and number of the civil action, “Frank H. Sefton vs. Robert F. Ramer, No. 9506.”

The judgment was that appellant be fined $500 and costs, and committed to prison until the fine and costs are paid. But he was released on bail pending the ruling on a motion for a new trial and this appeal.

The evidence tending to sustain the finding and judgment of the court that appellant was guilty of the offense charged was substantially as follows: On Monday, January 7, 1919, a complaint, duly verified, was filed in the Decatur Circuit Court, alleging that the appellant was the owner of a quarter section, containing 160 acres of land lying west of .the Fort Wayne Pike, and separated by it from the farm owned by the plaintiff in that action (Frank H. Sefton) on which he lived; that on the day before the appellant had caused and permitted to be erected on appellant’s said farm a small building within fifty rods from the residence of the plaintiff and the Fort Wayne Pike, and not far from certain tenant houses on plaintiff’s farm, and was threatening to and would store and permit to be stored [127]*127in the building nitroglycerine, dynamite and other explosives in quantities of from 300 to 1,000 quarts at a time; that said building was also near other dwelling houses where other persons lived, and near the track of a railroad; that said explosive substances so stored were liable to explode at any time; that plaintiff, his family and tenants were kept in constant fear of such an explosion, and they and all persons living in the neighborhood, and travelers on the highway and railroad were kept in imminent and constant danger; that theretofore nitroglycerine, dynamite and other explosives in similar quantities were stored on another farm, about a mile from plaintiff’s residence; and on a- day in the next preceding month — December, 1918— they exploded, from causes unknown to plaintiff, and broke the windows in plaintiff’s residence and tenant houses, and in other residences within a radius of five miles; and that the storage of such explosives there would constitute a nuisance, and imperil the lives and property of plaintiff and his tenants and neighbors, and of his and their families. A summons was issued and was served on appellant the same day. A small wooden' building, “six by eight,” had been hauled out from town by the American Glycerine Company and set up on appellant’s farm the day before, the appellant cutting the wire fence to open a way to drive in. After dark on the evening of the day the complaint was filed and the summons was served, or the next evening— witnesses differ — a wagon load of explosives was hauled to and stored in said building by the American Glycerine Company. About nine o’clock the next morning— Wednesday, January 8, 1918 — a restraining order issued by the court was served on the appellant, which recited the filing of a verified complaint and bond, and ordered that appellant be and was “restrained from storing and permitting to be stored nitroglycerine, [128]*128dynamite or other explosives upon” his farm. The agent of the American Glycerine Company, who controlled its business, was Ira Bird, a brother of appellant’s wife. On Saturday, January 11, 1919, said agent left at appellant’s home the key to the small building where the explosives were stored, and told appellant that if the dynamite man came along and asked for the key to tell him where it was. Later that day the man stopped and said he wanted to get the key, and appellant pointed it out to him where appellant’s wife had hung it on the porch when her brother, the company’s agent, left it. The man drove in and put some more explosives in the little house. Appellant went up to the crossroad north of his house to see the nitroglycerine man as he drove out about a key, and at the time admitted that he came up to get the key to this house, though he denied at the trial that he received the key back or ever afterward had it. Notice of an application for a temporary injunction on January 18, 1919, had been issued and served, but on that date the hearing was continued by agreement until January 25. On January 20, 1918, the plaintiff in the injunction suit filed an affidavit charging that on January 11, 1919, after being served with the restraining order, “the said defendant (appellant) had possession of a key to said storehouse, and did on said day unlock said building and permit a large quantity of nitroglycerine and explosives to be stored in said storehouse on said real estate in violation of the order,” etc. A rule was entered against appellant returnable January 25, 1919. At the trial on that day upon the charge of contempt of court, in answer to'questions by his own counsel, appellant testified that he had “leased the farm to the American Glycerine Company,” and that he “rented it to them” on December SO, 1918; that they owned the storage house, and appellant had no control over it; and [129]*129under examination by opposing counsel he testified that he had signed a written lease “day before yesterday”— January 28, 1919 — and dated it back to December 30, 1918, which recited that in consideration of $25 paid to him he leased to the American Glycerine Company, for “one year from date hereof, with the privilege to renew from year to year at the option of the (lessee) not to exceed in all a term of fifteen years, the exclusive right and privilege to erect and maintain a storage magazine for the storage of nitro-glycerine and other explosives, and to store such commodities therein, on” the appellant’s said quarter section of land, and that the lessee should “have a right of way over and .through said premises to go from the highway to and from said magazine with teams and vehicles * * *. If, at any time, the said (lessee) shall be prevented by lawful authority from using said premises for the purposes hereinbefore mentioned, or notified by lawful authority to remove the explosives from said magazine * * * the (lessee) shall then be released from any obligation to pay rent for the further use of said premises.” Not only was this instrument dated back to December 30, 1918, a week before the injunction suit was begun, but it also contained a notary’s certificate by a man who the appellant testified was one of his attorneys, that the lease was acknowledged before him on December 30, 1918. And appellant further testified that “when he rented the farm” he did his talking with Ira Bird, the agent of said company, who had blank contracts with him, which he showed to appellant, and they agreed to reduce the agreement to writing “when Mr. Lippert came,” and that when he came they reduced it to writing. After the building was set in his field, being a morning or two after the explosives were put in it, appellant was seen working right by it, but [130]*130the witness did not know what he was doing. ‘ Appellant continued to live upon and occupy his farm as before. He was advised by counsel that he had no right to interfere with the lessee going to the dynamite house after making such verbal lease, and before reducing it to writing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 N.E. 440, 190 Ind. 124, 1920 Ind. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramer-v-state-ind-1920.