State v. Graham

182 So. 711, 190 La. 669, 1938 La. LEXIS 1313
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 27, 1938
DocketNo. 34909.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 182 So. 711 (State v. Graham) 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. Graham, 182 So. 711, 190 La. 669, 1938 La. LEXIS 1313 (La. 1938).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

The State is appealing from a judgment sustaining a demurrer and motion to qüash two bills of information. The two cases are dealt with as one case. In the first bill of information the defendant is accused of violating Section .856 of the Revised Statutes, defining and denouncing misprision of felony. In the second bill the defendant is accused of having been an accessory after the fact of .the crime of murder committed in Gulfport, Mississippi. This bill of information is based upon Section 853 of the Revised Statutes, making it a crime, punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term not exceeding five years, for any person knowingly to harbor, conceal, maintain or assist the perpetrator of a felony or his accessory before the fact.

In the first bill of information, charging misprision of felony, it is charged that the defendant, on or about the 8th day of September, 1937, in the Parish of Concordia, in the State of Louisiana, “did wilfully, knowingly and feloniously conceal, and did not disclose to some committing magistrate or district attorney, that one Goldie Harrison and one Tommie Woodward had before then * * * murdered one J. O. Wolff, on the 7th day of September, 1937, in the City of Gulfport, State of Mississippi, contrary to the form of the statute of the State of Louisiana, in such case made and provided,” etc.

Section 856 of the Revised Statutes, on which this bill of information is based, defines and denounces misprision of felony,— thus;

“Sec. 856. If any person having knowledge of the commission of any crime punishable with death, or imprisonment at hard labor, shall conceal and not disclose it to some committing magistrate or district attorney, on conviction he shall be fined not exceeding three hundred dollars, and imprisoned at hard labor or otherwise not ex *673 ceeding twelve months, ht the discretion of the court.”

In the second bill of information it is charged that the defendant, on or about the 8th day of September, 1937, in the Parish of Concordia, Louisiana, “did wilfully, knowingly and feloniously harbor, conceal, maintain and assist a principal offender, to-wit: one Goldie Harrison, who had before then feloniously, wilfully and unlawfully, and of his malice aforethought, killed and murdered one J. O. Wolff, in the City of Gulfport, in the State of Mississippi, contrary to the form of the statute of the State of Louisiana, in such case made and provided,” etc.

The statute on which that bill of information is based, being Section 853 of the Revised Statutes, follows immediately the three sections dealing with the different grades of burglary, — and is under the rubric “Offenses Against Habitations”, — viz.:

“Sec. 853. If any person shall knowingly harbor, conceal, maintain or assist any principal offender or accessory thereto, before the fact, he shall suffer imprisonment at hard labor not exceeding five years.”

The two crimes which the defendant is accused of are cognate crimes. For that reason the principal plea or complaint made in the defendant’s demurrers and motions to quash is applicable to both bills of information. The first and main ground for the motion to quash is that the alleged murder, of one J. O. Wolff, by Goldie Harrison and Tommie Woodward, is alleged to h^ve been committed in the State of Mississippi; and hence that the alleged failure of the defendant to disclose the commission of the crime “to some committing magistrate or district attorney” in the Parish of Concordia, Louisiana, — or the alleged harboring and concealing of the principal offender, Goldie Harrison, in the Parish of Concordia, Louisiana, — was not a crime for which the defendant could be convicted in Louisiana. Stated somewhat differently, the contention of the defendant is that Section 856 has reference only to the concealment of — and the failure to disclose to some committing magistrate or district attorney in Louisiana — the commission of a felony that was committed in this State; and, likewise, the contention is that Section 853 has reference to the harboring of a principal offender or of his accessory before the fact, only when the felony, or principal offense, was 'Committed in Louisiana. In the demurrer to the first bill of information the defendant pleads that the bill is deficient in that it is not alleged that the murder of J. O. Wolff was not known generally, or that it was not known by “some committing magistrate or district attorney”,— either in Concordia Parish, Louisiana, or in Gulfport, Mississippi. In the demurrer to the second bill of information the defendant pleads that Section 853 of the Revised Statutes, on which the prosecution is based, hás reference only to the harboring or concealing of a principal offender who-has committed the crime of burglary, - as defined in Section 850, 851 or 852 of the Revised Statutes, — or to the harboring or concealing of an accessory before the fact of the commission of such burglary.

Section 853 of the Revised Statutes, according to the very terms in which it was *675 enacted originally, as Section 6 of the Act of March 20, 1818, Laws 1818, p. 168, denounced only the offense of being an accessory after the fact of the commission of the crime of burglary. And the position which this section was given originally, — and which it has retained as Section 54 of Act No. 120 of 1855 and as Section 853 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, — in relation to the sections defining and denouncing the several grades of burglary, — leaves very little doubt that this section, even yet; has reference only to the offense of being an accessory after the fact of the commission of the crime of burglary. Sections 850, 851, 852, 853 and 854 of the Revised Statutes of 1870 were copied, almost literally, from Sections 51, 52, 53, 54 and 55 of Act No. 120 of 1855, entitled “An Act Relative to Crimes and Offenses.” And these five sections were enacted originally as Sections 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 of the Act of March 20, 1818, entitled “An Act Supplementary to an Act for the Punishment of Crimes and Misdemeanors.” State v. Stephens, 150 La. 944, 91 So. 349, 23 A.L.R. 286.

' Section 3 of the Act of March 20, 1818,— which became Section 51 of Act No. 120 of 1855, — and which is now Section 850 of the Revised Statutes, — defines the highest grade of the crime of burglary, and prescribes the penalty of death. Section 4 of the Act of March 20, 1818, — which became Section 52 of Act No. 120 of 1855,— and which is now Section 851 of the Revised Statutes, — defines the second grade of the crime of burglary, and prescribes the penalty of imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term not exceeding 14 years. Section 5 of the Act of March 20, 1818, — which became Section 53 of Act No. 120 of 1855, —and which is now Section 852 of the Revised Statutes, — defines the third grade of the crime of burglary, and prescribes the penalty of imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term not exceeding 10 years. And Section 6 of the Act of March 20, 1818,— which became Section 54 of Act No. 120 of 1855, — and which is now Section 853 of the Revised Statutes, — defined and denounced the crime of being an “accessory after the fact” of the crime of burglary, as defined in any one of the three preceding sections of the statute, — thus:

“Sec. 6.

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Bluebook (online)
182 So. 711, 190 La. 669, 1938 La. LEXIS 1313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-graham-la-1938.