State v. Dunnington

102 So. 478, 157 La. 369, 1924 La. LEXIS 2223
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 1, 1924
DocketNo. 26810.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 102 So. 478 (State v. Dunnington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dunnington, 102 So. 478, 157 La. 369, 1924 La. LEXIS 2223 (La. 1924).

Opinions

THOMPSON, J.

John Dunnington and his two sons, Elmer and John, Jr., were charged by information of the district attorney with the crime of resisting an officer while executing an order of court. On a trial by a jury of five, John, Jr., was acquitted, and the other two were convicted. The two were given the maximum term of punishment in the penitentiary as prescribed by the statute.

The information reads as follows:

“ * * * That one John Dunnington, Sr., Elmer Dunnington, and John Dunnington, Jr., all being present, acting together, aiding and assisting each other, * * * willfully, illegally and feloniously did resist, oppose, and assault Joe Johnson, Joe Mixon, and Dave Story, all diily qualified and authorized deputy sheriffs * * * while said deputy sheriffs were attempting to execute an order of Hon. Robert S. Ellis, judge of the Twenty-Fifth district court * * * to arrest said John Dunnington, Sr., Elmer Dunnington, and John Dunnington, Jr., for fighting and disturbing the peace in the courtroom while court was in session. ‡ $ >!< >>

The statute under which the charge is laid, being section "865 of the Revised Stát *371 utes of 1870, as amended and re-enacted by Act 11 of 1882, reads as follows:

“That whoever shall illegally resist, oppose or assault any officer of this state, while serving or attempting to serve or execute the process. writ or order of any court, or shall assault and beat or wound any officer or other person duly authorized, while serving or executing any process, writ or order aforesaid, shall on conviction be imprisoned not exceeding two years at hard labor or otherwise, or fined not exceeding one thousand dollars, or both at the discretion of the court.”

The record presents three bills of exception. The first is to the refusal of the court to give a requested charge; the second to the charge as given by the court, which was to the reverse of the one requested; and the third bill was reserved to the overruling of a motion for a new trial.

As the first two bills relate to the same subject-matter, we will consider them together. After the court had finished 'the regular charge to the jury, counsel for the defendant requested the court to charge that the words, “order of any court,” contained in the statute meant a written order, addressed to the officer at the time, and not a verbal one. The court declined to give the charge, as it had already in the general charge informed the jury that the words, “order of any court,” meant a verbal order as well as a written one.

The precise question has never been considered by this court so far as we have been able to find. However, considering it as an original proposition, we are unwilling to go so far as to hold that in no case can a prosecution be maintained under the statute in question unless the order of court, the execution of which is willfully opposed and resisted, is shown to have been in writing. The statute does not read that way. There is no qualification of nor restriction placed upon the word “order.” And there is certainly nothing in the language of the statute that would, by any fair and reasonable implication, indicate an intention of the lawmaker to denounce only as an offense the resistance of the execution of a written order. The word “order” as used in the statute is broad enough to include any legal and valid order, written or verbal, issued by any court of competent jurisdiction.

There are many orders issued by a court in the regular course of judicial procedure in civil matters which are required to be in writing. As an illustration, we might mention an order and writ of injunction, provisional seizure, attachment sequestration; also an execution, or fi. fa. issued on a final judgment and an order or writ of ejectment. These all are imperatively required to be in writing. If an officer, in the proper and orderly execution of any of such writs or orders, were illegally opposed, resisted, or assaulted, undoubtedly the state would be required to allege and to prove as an essential element of the prosecution, that the writ or order was in writing.

On the other hand, there are many instanter orders made and issued in the course of criminal procedure and in the trial of criminal cases which are not required to be reduced to writing before being put into execution. Among such it is sufficient to mention the order which is usually issued from the bench on request of litigants to place the witnesses under sequestration. No one, we imagine, would contend for a moment, that in order to carry out such an order from the court, the sheriff would have to be armed with the command in writing. Nor would any one dispute the fact that the sheriff would be answerable for contempt of court should he refuse to execute the order because it was not in writing.

And again, suppose a riot or a fight occurs in open court, or an assault is made upon the officers of the court, or the witness on the witness stand is attacked, would any one doubt the authority or the duty of the judge to issue his verbal order to the sheriff to arrest forthwith the offending parties? *373 Would any one doubt tbe validity and legality of sucb an order, and would any one question the right or duty of the sheriff immediately to make the arrest?

The authority of the judge in such matters and the legality of the orders thus rendered being conceded, no valid and sufficient reason is or can be suggested why the one who would resist or oppose the execution of such an order by the sheriff would not be answerable for the offense denounced by the statute under consideration.

After all is said,, the question as to whether the order must be in writing, or whether a party can be prosecuted under the statute for having resisted the execution of a verbal order, is to be determined by the particular facts of each case. If the subject-matter in which the order is issued is such as to authorize a verbal order, then a legal and valid verbal order answers the purpose and intention of the statute.

A mere reference to the pertinent facts brought up under the bill of exception and the per curiam of the court will serve to show that the order, the execution of which the defendants were charged with resisting, was a perfectly legal and valid one.

The court was in session, and had just finished the trial of a rule and had ordered Elmer and John Dunnington, Jr., to give a bond to keep the peace for 12 months. The rule had been issued at the instance of Ed Bickford, with whom the Dunningtons had had a previous difficulty. When the order for the peace bond was issued, Elmer Dunnington arose and made an attack upon Ed Bickford in open court. The judge at once ordered the deputy sheriff to arrest and to take into custody the said Elmer Dunning-ton, and the deputy did so, pulling Elmer off of Bickford. John Dunnington, Sr., then renewed the assault on Ed Bickford, grabbing him by the hair of his head and beating his head against the floor. The judge from the bench called on the attorneys and bystanders present in the courtroom to interpose and not to let John Dunnington, Sr., kill Bickford.

There being no response to the request, the judge descended from the bench, went to the parties and took hold of Dunnington and pulled his right hand loose from Bickford’s hair.

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 478, 157 La. 369, 1924 La. LEXIS 2223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dunnington-la-1924.