State Ex Rel. Buresh v. Adams

468 S.W.2d 18, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 990
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 14, 1971
Docket56359
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 468 S.W.2d 18 (State Ex Rel. Buresh v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Buresh v. Adams, 468 S.W.2d 18, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 990 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

BARDGETT, Judge.

This is an original proceeding in prohibition filed by relator, who is a defendant in a certain criminal cause pending before respondent on an information filed by the prosecuting attorney of Audrain County, Missouri, seeking to prohibit respondent from taking any further action in the cause on the ground that no preliminary hearing was held on the charge contained in the pending information. We previously issued our provisional rule in prohibition which we now make absolute.

The subject information was filed July 17, 1969 and charged relator under our comprehensive stealing statute, Sec. 560.156, V.A.M.S., with stealing over $50.00, the charging portion of which is as follows:

“Said defendant continuously between July 1959 and January 1969 all in one continuous scheme, act and transaction did unlawfully, willfully and feloniously steal, take, convert, use and embezzle lawful money of the United States and other property of value, of a value in excess of fifty dollars, owned by and belonging to Consolidated Electric Cooperative, a corporation, hereinafter referred to as CEC, and located in Audrain County, Missouri, by means of certain false representations, pretenses and deceit, to wit: Between July 1959 and January 1969 defendant was the employee and general manager of CEC and *20 as such submitted false and untrue claims and vouchers to CEC for alleged legitimate travel expenses to various places, falsely pretending and representing that said claims and vouchers were incurred by him in the course and scope of his employment with CEC, which claims defendant then as general manager approved for payment by CEC as legitimate business expenses of CEC; and defendant had delivered, placed, located, installed and used, at his own personal dwelling house located in Audrain County, Missouri, and for his own personal use and benefit, various goods, wares and merchandise of value, and defendant directed the suppliers and installers thereof to invoice and bill the same directly to CEC, although in truth and in fact said property was not used by or for the benefit of CEC, which false and untrue invoices and bills defendant as general manager approved for payment by CEC as legitimate business expenses of CEC; and defendant as general manager directed the use of CEC employee labor and services and CEC equipment on his aforesaid dwelling house, which services were performed solely for defendant’s own personal use and benefit but which were paid for and approved for payment by defendant ; and defendant • used and converted to his own use electricity supplied to his aforesaid dwelling house and owned by CEC, which electricity defendant as general manager did not have charged to his own account and for which without permission he did not pay, which facts defendant concealed from CEC, all of which aforesaid pretenses and representations and deceit were made to CEC, and were false and untrue and were known to be false and untrue when made by defendant and the true facts were kept from and concealed by defendant from CEC, and CEC relying upon said false pretenses and representations, and being deceived thereby, because defendant as general manager either submitted said claims, or directed others to submit said claims, to CEC and then approved the same as proper business expenses of CEC and directed that CEC checks be issued in payment thereof, and CEC was thereby induced to part with and did part with lawful money of the United States and employee services and labor owned by and belonging to CEC, with the felonious intent then and there to steal and permanently deprive the owner, CEC, of the use thereof and convert the same to his, that is defendant’s, own use by means of deceit, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State.

WHEREOF the informant asks the judgment of the Court.” (Emphasis ours.)

Prior to the filing of the information, supra, there was an amended complaint in two counts filed in Magistrate Court against relator. Count I alleged, in substance, that relator stole, took, used and embezzled money in the approximate sum of $870.00 from relator’s employer, the Consolidated Electric Cooperative (herein referred to as CEC), between July 1966 and October 1968 by falsifying business expense accounts, and conforms substantially to that portion of the information we have italicized above, except in two material respects : one — the information charged that the criminal acts took place between July 1959 and January 1969, whereas the complaint confined itself to July 1966 and October 1968 and, two, the information charged one continuous scheme whereas the complaint did not so charge.

Count II of the amended complaint alleged that relator, between July 1959 and January 1969 stole and converted electricity of CEC to relator’s use and conforms substantially to that portion of the information, supra, charging relator with stealing and converting electricity to his own use.

A preliminary hearing was held on the amended complaint. The magistrate bound relator over for trial on Count I and discharged him on Count II.

The sole issue is whether or not relator was accorded a preliminary hearing as required by Sup.Ct. Rule 23.02 and Sec. 544.-250, RSMo 1959 on the charge contain- ' ed in the information.

*21 Respondent is represented by the prosecuting attorney of Audrain County. He contends a sufficient preliminary hearing was accorded relator because the information charged major stealing under Sec. 560.156 and the counts in the amended complaint, upon which a preliminary hearing was held, as well as two previous complaints, upon which no preliminary hearing was held, also charged offenses under the same statute and that by reason of this relator has been fully informed of the nature of the charges against him.

The information filed by the prosecutor expanded the time within which the alleged offenses were committed to about nine and one-half years beginning July 1959 and ending January 1969. In addition to charging relator with stealing by means of deceit in falsifying expense accounts, the act alleged in Count I of the amended complaint, the information charged relator with four additional criminal actsj including the subject matter of the dismissed Count II — stealing electricity by using it in his home and converting it to his own use without charging it to his account or paying for it.

State ex rel. McCutchan v. Cooley, 321 Mo. 786, 12 S.W.2d 466, was a prohibition proceeding wherein relator sought to prohibit the Circuit Judge from proceeding with the trial of five criminal cases. There, the relator was accorded a preliminary hearing on complaints covering the same subject matter as the informations and was discharged. Thereafter the five informa-tions were filed against him.

The Court held that the clear intent of the statute (then Sec. 3848, R.S. 1919 (Laws of 1925, p. 195) — now Sec.

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Bluebook (online)
468 S.W.2d 18, 1971 Mo. LEXIS 990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-buresh-v-adams-mo-1971.