State v. Adams

274 S.W. 21, 308 Mo. 664, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 748
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 21 (State 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 v. Adams, 274 S.W. 21, 308 Mo. 664, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 748 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*667 WALKEB, P. J.

The appellant was indicted in the Circuit Court of Eandolph County for bribery. Upon a trial to a jury he was found guilty and his punishment assessed^ at three years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. Fhom this judgment he appeals.

In September, 1921, the appellant conducted a soft-drink parlor in the city of Moberly. Witnesses for the State testified that he told them that he had paid Jerry Mize, the chief of police of the city of Moberly, five hundred dollars, for which Mize was to permit him to run a gambling house during the week an Elks’ convention was to be held in Moberly, and that Mize had “double-crossed” him, by which we understand it is meant that Mize did not comply with the alleged contract for police protection. There was testimony by three witnesses that appellant stated in their presence that Mize was crooked; that appellant had paid him five hundred dollars to let Mm run a gambling house during the week of an Elks’ convention and that Mize, after such understanding, had come to the appellant and said he wasn’t satisfied and that he wanted more money. Other witnesses testified to a like effect, concerning appellant’s statements, except as to the demand for more money. Two witnesses, *668 police officers, testified that shortly after the Elks’ convention Mize gave each of them twenty dollars,; that to one of them he said, “Roy sent you this.” The other said when the money was given to him he did not understand it to he a bribe from the appellant to induce him to neglect his official duty. One witness testified that during “Elks’ week” poker and crap games were in progress upstairs in a building called ‘£ The Green Tree' ’ that one Bennett Clark was running the craps game; that the appellant was “sitting in” the poker game, but he didn’t know who was running it. Appellant told him that he was “trying to make some money.”

Witnesses for the defense testified that the second story of the Gray Wolf Building, the ground floor of which was occupied by appellant, was not used during £ £>Elks ’ week. ’ ’ In addition it was stated by certain witnesses that they had heard the conversation between the appellant and a witness named Grimes, and that nothing was said concerning the payment of money b3r appellant to Mize to insure police protection. Bennett Clark denied that he was operating a craps game during the week of the Elks’ convention. A number of witnesses testified as to the good character of Mize, the alleged bribe-taker. He denied having accepted any money from the appellant,; and that he never gave either of the witnesses who testified to the contrary any money and told themi it was sent to them or either of them by the appellant. The evidence for the defense, as its purport shows, tended more to exculpate Mize than to establish the innocence of the appellant.

I. It is contended that the indictment is insufficient to charge an offense under the statute. It is drawn under Section 3177, Revised Statutes 1919, . . . -, r. L ,. -, • , -,. which defines the órnense o± bribing a public officer and prescribes the punishment. It may he epitomized as prohibiting the giving of anything of value to a state, county or municipal officer to influence him in the performance of his official duty or to induce him to *669 neglect the performance of same or to perform such, duty with, partiality, favor or otherwise than as required by law. The crime defined is statutory, and it follows that all facts necessary to constitute the offense as provided therein must be stated with certainty and precision. It does not conform to these requirements. After alleging with unusual prolixity the power possessed and exercised by Moberly, as a city of the third class, to adopt and enforce ordinances for the purposes therein stated, the duties of the chief of police, in this instance Mize, are defined. The indictment then alleges at much length, but with a reasonable reference to the requirements of the statute, the facts in regard to the commission of the crime with which the appellant is charged.

The indictment closes with the usual allegations in charges of this nature, of the felonious intent of the officer in his neglect and omission to perform his official duties “in regard to the ordinance of said city preventing gambling and the setting up of gambling houses therein,” etc. Although inartificially drawn it contains perhaps sufficient material allegations to bring it within the purview of the statute, except, that in the allegations as to the adoption and existence under the power of enactment possessed by the city of ordinances, it fails to declare that an ordinance had been adopted or was in force prohibiting the setting up or keeping of a gaming or gambling house as follows: “And there were in force in said city then and there laws and ordinances providing for good government, peace, and order of said city and common gaming and gambling houses and tables and instruments used for gaming and gambling within the limits of said city and providing a punishment for the violation of said ordinances.”

The specific contention as to the defect in this indictment is the omission, in the third line of the paragraph quoted, between the word “and” and the word “common,” of the word “prohibiting.”

The crime charged is a felony and an indictment therefor should leave nothing to intendment. While *670 there is a state statute (Sec. 3541, R. S. 1919) denouncing the setting up or keeping of a common gambling house, the prohibitive supervision over such places and the apprehension of those charged with the keeping of same, is limited to officers who derive their power from state laws. A municipal officer was here charged to have been bribed. The indictment charges that it was his duty to cooperate with the executive and legal officials of the city in' the prevention of the setting up and keeping of common gaming, gambling houses, etc. But there is no allegation that the city had adopted and there was in existence an ordinance prohibiting this offense. This was a material allegation necessary to the exercise of the official power or authority the bribe was intended to neutralize or destroy. In the absence of such an ordinance a city marshal or police officer would be possessed of no more power in this matter than a private citizen.

However persuasively other allegations of the indictment may indicate the existence of the ordinance referred to, inferences cannot be employed to supplant essential averments in a criminal charge. This is especially true where the gravamen of the offense is dependent upon the existence of the ordinance under review and not as to the general legal authority of the officer or to the validity of the ordinance if the existence of the same had been pleaded. It is, therefore, the absence of the allegation of the authoritative ordinance which distinguishes this case from others holding to the contrary. In short, in the absence of this allegation the acts of the officer, which it was sought by the bribe to prevent, were outside of his official functions and the payment of money to him to prevent their exercise would not constitute bribery. United States v. Boyer, 85 Fed. 425; In re Yee Gee, 83 Fed. 145; United States v. Gibson, 47 Fed. 833, are cases illustrative of the correctness of this conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 21, 308 Mo. 664, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-adams-mo-1925.