State Ex Rel. Meininger v. Breuer

264 S.W. 1, 304 Mo. 381, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 543
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 1 (State Ex Rel. Meininger v. Breuer) 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. Meininger v. Breuer, 264 S.W. 1, 304 Mo. 381, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 543 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

*388 JAMES T. BLAIR, J.

In March, 1923, relator was convicted of embezzlement and sentenced to the penitentiary, and appealed. While this case was pending on appeal, the same circuit court took steps to put relator on trial on indictments for felony which had been found before his conviction for the embezzlement. He thereupon began this proceeding in prohibition. The ques *389 tion presented is whether the circuit court has jurisdiction to try relator for the other offenses in question during the pendency of his appeal.

Relator contends, in legal effect, that (1) Section 3697, Revised Statutes 1919, deprives the circuit court of jurisdiction to proceed in the cases on which it was about to try relator; (2) that whatever is thought of this construction of the statute it has been worked into its words by its subsequent re-enactments; (3) that this construction is supported by other enactments; and (4) prohibition is the appropriáte remedy. /

I. This court has never held that Section 3697 deprives a circuit court of jurisdiction to put one previously, convicted and sentenced upon trial for an offense committed prior to such previous sentence, but has heretofore (Ex parte Allen, 196 Mo. l. c. 232) pointed out the difference between its previous rulings and the rulings sought in this case. It seems appropriate carefully to examine the supposed principle which lies at the root of relator’s contentions.

II. The doctrine which relator now urges this court to adopt is founded by him,upon a construction he gives certain decisions of this court. Chief among these is Ex parte Meyers, 44 Mo. 279. In that case the record (still on file) and the opinion show that Meyers, at the March, 1866, term of tbe St. Louis Criminal Court, pleaded guilty to a charge of grand larceny and was thereupon sentenced to two years ’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. At the May, 1866, term of the same court Meyers was convicted by a jury ,on a like charge and sentenced to three years ’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. The second sentence in no way refers to the first, and the trial court made no effort to make the terms cumulative or successive. Meyers was committed to the penitentiary and served more than three years in that institution. In July, 1869, he sued out a *390 writ of habeas corpus, whereby he sought his discharge. In his brief, a single manuscript page, he made the points: “Conceding that under our statute” (now Section 3697) “a sentence may he by judgment of the court made to commence at a future time or upon the expiration of a former sentence; that statute canpot apply here because (1) it does not appear by the record that the second conviction was before sentence in the first was pronounced, as one was on the 31st March and the other on 8th June, 1866; (2) It was the duty of the court pronouncing the sentence to have stated the time when the second conviction should begin” and “no cause is to be brought by construction within a statute when it does not fully come within” it.

Counsel for respondent in that case suggested that the statute applied and of itself made the sentences cumulative, since the record showed a sentence on the first conviction before sentence in the second, but did not show a sentence in the first before conviction in the second case.

In its opinion the court pointed out the error in the assumption that both convictions occurred at the same term, and stated the facts as the record shows them, i; e. that the sentence on the plea of guilty was passed at the March term, 1866, and the conviction on the second charge occurred at the May term, 1866, and concludes: “The prisoner was twice found guilty and sentenced on each finding at different terms.” For that reason the court held that Chap. 207, sec. 9, Revised Statutes 1865 (now Sec. 3697, R. S. 1919) did not apply to the case because “this section applies only where a person is convicted of two or more offenses at the same term, and both'convictions must take place before the sentence is pronounced in either case.” When this point had been reached, the court had disposed of the statute. The proceeding before it was in habeas corpus, and the question was whether the record showing entitled the warden further to hold petitioner in his custody under the two *391 sentences. Petitioner had served a time in excess of the longest of these. The law then, as now, was settled beyond dispute that, in the absence of a statute to the contrary, sentences were not cumulative, even where they might be made so, unless the sentencing court expressly made them so by directing that the subsequent one should commence at a future time determined or determinable with certainty. In the Meyers sentences no sort of effort was made by the trial court to render the sentences cumulative. The court discussed other matters but finally ruled as follows: “The prisoner has already served out more than the length of time prescribed .by the longest sentence, and I think that he is entitled to his discharge. Prisoner discharged. The other judges concur.” Since the trial court had not attempted to exercise the power to make the sentences cumulative, the court took the right course in disposing of the case on that theory, as it did in the sentence quoted in which its actual ruling appears.

But it may be said that if the trial court had no jurisdiction to impose the second sentence, that would have entitled Meyers to his discharge, and that put the question of jurisdiction in the second trial into his habeas corpus case, and what the court said was pertinent to that question and, therefore, not obiter dictum.

First, this court held (Ex parte Allen, 196 Mo. 226) that this is not the true construction of the decision in State v. Buck, 120 Mo. 479, which is founded upon and purports to follow the Meyers Case. It is pointed out in the Allen Case that the ruling in the Buck Case was that to put upon trial one who had previously been convicted and sentenced was error and not a jurisdictional matter. Necessarily this applies to the Meyers Case. The case was so construed in Indiana. [Kennedy v. Howard, 74 Ind. 87.]

The court in the Allen Case (l. c. 231) ruled that the question was not one of jurisdiction. It said: “Was the court without jurisdiction to try defendant for the sec *392 ond offense, committed after he had been tried and convicted of robbery and while he was awaiting the adjournment of court at that term to be conveyed to the penitentiary? We have no hesitancy in holding it was not.” The court then approached the question from two different angles, on: principle and with reference to a special statute. With respect to the first it said, in part: “It was a court of criminal jurisdiction and had jurisdiction to hear and determine the offense of which petitioner was convicted and over the person of petitioner.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 1, 304 Mo. 381, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-meininger-v-breuer-mo-1924.