State v. Burns

172 S.W.2d 259, 351 Mo. 163, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 594
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 7, 1943
DocketNo. 38412.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 172 S.W.2d 259 (State v. Burns) 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. Burns, 172 S.W.2d 259, 351 Mo. 163, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 594 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

*169 ELLISON, J.

The appellant, Tom Burns, was convicted in the circuit court of Greene county of a violation of Sec. 12294, R. S. 1939, Mo. R. S. A., sec. 12294, in signing a name other than his own to an initiative petition proposing an amendment of Art. IV of the State Constitution by striking out twenty-five sections and inserting sixteen new sections in lieu thereof. The general purpose of the amendment was to substitute a unicameral General Assembly for the present Senate and House of Representatives. The jury assessed his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years. Appellant’s brief makes ten assignments of error. We shall consider such of these as merit discussion; and adopt, without quotation marks, appellant’s statement of the general facts. Other detailed facts will be stated as necessary in connection with each assignment. •

On or about the 19th day of June, 1942, the Missouri Committee for a one-house legislature in the city of St. Louis, employed the appellant and one Erivin Greenhaw to secure names on initiative petitions. Appellant and said Greenhaw were to and did receive compensation therefor; that upon such employment they received from this Committee a large number of initiative petitions and returned to Springfield from St. Louis with said petitions for the purpose of securing names thereon. •

That appellant went to the Chamber of Commerce in Springfield, Missouri, and secured a large number of city telephone directories of many cities and towns in south Missouri; that said appellant and Greenhaw employed a dozen or more girls and women and paid them to work in the basement of appellant’s home copying names from these directories on the initiative petitions, and some of the names written on the initiative petitions purporting to be signers thereof were made up by these girls and women without getting them out of the directories; that in this manner something near 38,000 names purporting to be signers of these petitions were secured and were taken by appellant and said Greenhaw to St. Louis, Missouri, and delivered to the Missouri Committee for a one-house legislature and that for their services in procuring names they received from this Committee together something like. $2,100.00. These petitions were then taken by the aforesaid Committee to the office of the Secretary of State for filing and after filed were later withdrawn and that proposed initiative amendment did not appear on the ballot at the general election in 1942.

At the close of the State’s case the defendant offered no evidence whatever but filed a demurrer to the State’s evidence which was by the trial court overruled. ,

*170 Appellant’s main assignments of error attack the State’s information from various angles. Some of these contentions are rather hazy. To begin with he expresses “serious doubt” whether Sec. 12294, supra, is constitutional, because the title of the legislative bill by which it and other related statutes were enacted (Laws Mo., 1909, p. 554) “nowhere provides who may sign or who may not sign such a petition, or the qualifications of the signer, hence this statute is broader than the title;” also because the statute by its terms would forbid one person from signing the name of another in good faith when that other for some reason could not write. This contention is without merit for several reasons: (1) no such objection was made at the trial; (2) the point was not mentioned or preserved in the motion for new trial; (3) the constitutional provision supposed to have been violated is not pointed out; (4) the expression of mere doubt in the brief here as to the constitutionality of the statute did not raise that issue squarely or directly, as so many decisions have held must be done.

Another assignment assails the information on the ground that it failed to apprise the appellant of the nature of the accusation against him — this because it did not [263] set out the alleged initiative petition, but merely attempted to plead its legal effect by stating conclusions of law and fact; and in one instance alleged facts “clear outside of and beyond the statute.” Omitting the commencement, the charging part of the information was that the appellant:

“did then and there wilfully, knowingly, unlawfully and feloniously sign the name of Paul Smith to a certain initiative petition addressed to and thereafter offered for filing and filed with Dwight H. Brown, Secretary of and for the State of Missouri, which initiative petition petitioned the said Secretary of State to submit to the voters of the State of Missouri for their approval or rejection at the regular general election to be held on the 3rd day of November, A. D. 1942, a proposed constitutional amendment which by its terms would, if enacted, repeal Section 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, 30, 31, 32, 38, 39, 40, and 42 of Article IV of the Constitution of Missouri and enect in the stead of said repealed Sections new sections numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 11-A, 11-B, 11-C, 11-D, and 11-E, as set forth in said petition, which said new sections provided for a unicameral legislature for the State of Missouri; the said Paul Smith being then and there a name other then the name of the said Tom Burns, he, the said Tom Burns, knowingly not having the consent, permission, or authority of him, the said Paul Smith, to sign his, the said Paul Smith’s name to the said initiative petition, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State.”

The specific complaints in the appellant’s brief are that: (1) the following two allegations in the information were mere conclusions; (a) the charge that the document to which appellant signed the *171 name of Paul Smith was “an initiative petition”; (b) the charge that the initiative petition proposed (italics ours) “a constitutional amendment which, if enacted, would repeal” the enumerated sections of Art. IY of the Constitution; (2) the concluding part of the information, charging the appellant signed the name of Paul Smith to the petition “knowingly not having the consent, permission, or authority of him, the said Paul Smith, to sign his, the said Paul Smith’s, name to the said initiative petition,” went clear outside the statute, Sec. 12294, supra.

On point 1, appellant cites State v. Hayward, 83 Mo. 299, 304, and State v. Wade, 267 Mo. 249, 257, 183 S. W. 598, 600. But we are unable to see that these eases are applicable. The Hayward case was a prosecution for criminal libel. The information charged the defendants with printing, publishing and circulating certain “obscene, lewd and licentious pamphlets entitled, ‘ The case of C. O. Godfrey. ’ ’ ’ The information did not further set out or describe the obscene matter, or plead any excuse for failing to do so. The decision held that “where a statute so far individuates the offense that the offender has proper notice,” a charge in the language of the.statute"will be sufficient; but that where the crime alleged consists of words written or spoken, (italics ours) ‘‘the words are the facts which constitute the crime,” and hence must be set out.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W.2d 259, 351 Mo. 163, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-burns-mo-1943.