State ex rel. Owens ex rel. County School Fund v. Fraser

65 S.W. 569, 165 Mo. 242, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 569 (State ex rel. Owens ex rel. County School Fund v. Fraser) 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. Owens ex rel. County School Fund v. Fraser, 65 S.W. 569, 165 Mo. 242, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 270 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

At the June term, 1894, of the Nodaway Circuit Court, one Edward Hennesy, alias E. W. Hall, and one John Green, alias David C. Wilson, were jointly in-[249]*249dieted, charged with grand larceny. The said Green and the said Wilson were at the time in the Nodaway county jail, awaiting the action of the court, and after the indictment was returned by the grand jury, they were brought into court and, entering their pleas of not guilty, the cause was continued to the November term of court, 1894. At the June term of said circuit court, an order of record was made by said court, by which the bail required of each of said defendants was, respectively, fixed at the sum of four thousand dollars; said order, so fixing the amount of bail to be given by each of said prisoners, was made by said court in open session and while defendants were in said court. The said Hall and said Wilson, failing to find and give bail as required by said order of said court, were' thereupon duly committed to jail on account of their said failure to find bail as stated, and were remanded to the custody of one Benjamin E. Pixler, sheriff of Nodaway county, Mis-souri. The amount of hail required of' each of said prisoners, though fixed by the order of said court and entered of record in said court, was not indorsed upon the warrant of commitment issued against said prisoners. Shortly after their commitment, the June term of the circuit court of Nodaway county for 1894 was adjourned. Sometime after the adjournment of the June term of said Nodaway Circuit Court, to-wit, September 11, 1894, and while the Hon. C. A. Anthony, judge of the Nodaway Circuit Court, was absent from said county and was in Albany, Gentry county, Missouri, holding a term of court in that latter county, the attorney of David’C. Wilson, one of said parties so indicted and so held in jail, telegraphed Judge Anthony at Albany, Missouri, in regard to giving bond for said David C. Wilson. The contents of the telegram was not proven at the trial. Counsel for appellant sought to prove' its contents as follows:

[250]*250“Maryville, Mo., Sept. 11, 1894.
“O. A. Anthony, Albany, Missouri.
“Green is ready to give bond twenty-five hundred. Will you send order reducing bond from four thousand ?
“Dawson.”

But appellant offered no competent evidence of the conténts of said telegram.

The reply by letter of Judge Anthony to this telegram was as follows:

“Albany, Mo., Sept. 11, 1894.
“Judge Lafe Dawson, Maryville, Mo.
“Dear Sir: Your telegram at hand and I am at a loss what answer to make. First, being out of the county and in vacation, can I do anything ? What are Vinsonhaler’s ideas ? If he is willing that the bond be reduced and looks to the taking of the boftd, that it is safe and sure, I don’t know that I have any objections and will not object. Yet' to make an order as I am now situated, out of court and out of the county, I don’t see my way clear to make any formal order concerning the matter. ■ It may be proper remedy is by habeas corpus.
“Yours truly,
'“C. A. Anthony.”

It further appears in testimony that on September 13, 1894, the following letter was written to Judge Anthony, who was still in Albany, Missouri:

“Maryville, Mo., Sept. 13, 1894.
“Dear Judge: There seems to be a little hitch in the bond matter yet. The form of bond prepared after reciting that the accused shall appear from day to day, from term to ferrn, etc., and not depart the court without leave, etc., then continues ‘and if he shall pay all sums of money adjudged [251]*251against him by said court on said indictment, then the above bond shall be null and void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue of law.’ The bondsman objects to signing the last condition of the bond, for the reason that he thinks it will bind him for costs in addition to the face of the bond. Ed and I have carefully examined the statutes and find nothing calling for such bond. Our statutes mentions one cause only where the bondsmen are liable for costs, and that is where he surrenders his principal. The bond will be good and will be forfeited in case of failure to appear without the lines in question above set forth, but Ed wanted to know what you think about their erasure, and hence I have given you a full statement of the affair.
“Yours truly,
“Lake Dawson.
“Hon. O. A. Anthony, Albany.”

Under date of September 14, 1894, Judge Anthony wrote the following answer to Judge Dawson:

“Albany, Mo., September 14, 1894.
“Hon. Lafe Dawson:
“Dear Judge: Your letter reached me after court convened. Didn’t have time to investigate and answer you by telegram. The surety is only bound by the penalty of the bond. It can not be extended. The costs are taxable to the bondsman under section 4131, on surrender of principal. In that case, the penalty of the bond is not paid.
“Yours truly,
“0. A. Anthony.”

The record fails to show any communication or attempted communication between the prisoner, Ed Hennesy, alias E. W. Hall, or his attorney, and Judge Anthony, and is absolutely silent as to any attempt whatever to procure a reduction [252]*252of Bail for said prisoner from the amount specified in the order fixing his bail, at the June term of the Nodaway Circuit Court, 1894; and concerning the matter of bail as to Green, alias Wilson, the oral testimony on the part of appellant, introduced at the trial, showed as follows:

Benjamin E. Pixler, sheriff in charge of said prisoners, and who pretended to take the bail bonds in suit, as hereinafter stated, concerning Green’s bond, swore in answer to the following questions:

“Q. As jailer, now there was a warrant of commitment delivered to you for failing to give bond, wasn’t there? A. Tes, sir.
“Q. Now on this bond, there was no indorsement for the amount of the bail fixed by the court, was there, on the commitment ? A. I think not.
“Q. You were holding them in this manner at the time that the sureties signed this bond, in question, weren’t you ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You know as a matter of fact, that during the session of court here no modification had been made of that bond or while the judge was in this county? A. No, sir, there hadn’t.
“Q. There hadn’t any modification from the four thous- and dollars each bond been made ? A. No, sir.
“Q. Now at the time these two defendants, that is Hall and Wilson, asked to give bail, Judge Anthony wasn’t then in the county, was he? A. I think not.”

Concerning the bond for John Green, alias David C. Wilson, and concerning the correspondence hereinbefore stated, Judge C. A. Anthony, a witness introduced by appellants, in answer to interrogatories, testified as follows:

“Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 569, 165 Mo. 242, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-owens-ex-rel-county-school-fund-v-fraser-mo-1901.