State v. Harland

61 Ohio Law. Abs. 455
CourtGeauga County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1951
StatusPublished

This text of 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 455 (State v. Harland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Geauga County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Harland, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 455 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

[456]*456OPINION

By THOMAS, J:

Defendant demurs to all seventy-two (72) counts of his indictment. The counts relate to thirty-one (31) different telephone calls which the defendant is charged with having permitted George Gordon, a prisoner in the county jail, to make “beyond the confines of his cell” on twenty-four (24) different days between the hours of 8:00 P. M., and 8:00 A. M. These days specified are during the period from March 13, 1951, through May 7, 1951.

Each count refers to one or more telephone calls made on the same day. For each day’s calls, whether one or more, the defendant is charged severally under §§12886, 12849 and 12850 GC.

As his chief claim that the indictment is insufficient he urges that he is not informed as to whether the State charges that he

“actively performed the acts which the State contends constitutes a violation of the statutes in question, or whether the State will contend that he had knowledge of or consented to the acts being performed by others and that such knowledge and consent forms the basis of the charges set forth in the indictment.”

The absence of such allegations is evident.

The necessity for such allegations is contested by the State, which contends that

“In the case at bar all of the counts of the indictment are couched in the exact wording of the statute and then there is added thereto specific facts of the persons, time and place which constitute the violation of the section charged. Certainly the defendant is given notice of the offense of which he is charged. The indictment is complete and proper on its face.”

Counts one, two and three typify all the'counts. Each will be examined in the light of defendant’s claim that an essential element of each offense charged is personal active performance of the acts charged or knowledge of or consent to the acts being performed by others.

Count one, states (omitting formal allegations):

“Stuart Harland on or about the 4th day of April, 1951, at the County of Geauga aforesaid, having charge of the county jail of Geauga County, Ohio, did neglect or refuse to obey or conform to a rule or regulation lawfully prescribed by the Court of Common Pleas of said County for the management and regulations of such jail, or did omit or neglect to perform a lawful duty in respect thereto, to-wit: permitted [457]*457one, George Gordon to go beyond the confines of his cell and use the jail telephone at 10:06 o’clock P. M. on April 4, 1951.”

Except for the concluding language (following the word, to-wit), this count is drawn in the language of §12886 GC, which provides:

“Whoever, having charge of a county jail, neglects or refuses to obey or conform to a rule or regulation lawfully prescribed by the court of common pleas for the management and regulation of such jail, or omits or neglects to perform a lawful duty in respect thereto, shall be fined not less than five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars.”

Attention must be paid to a recent decision of the Supreme Court (State v. Yudick, 155 Oh St, 269), to the effect that an indictment for automobile manslaughter, couched in the language of §6307-18 GC, and which enumerates certain sections of the traffic code claimed to be violated and which seeks to specify the nature of those violations, must assert sufficient facts to constitute violations of such sections of the traffic code. This qualifies the general rule of criminal pleading, authorized by §13437-4 GC, and recognized in the Yudick decision, that an indictment may charge an offense “in the words of the enactment describing the offense or declaring the matter charged to be a public offense.”

In view of the language of the counts of the present indictment, the rule of the Yudick case is applicable here.

Thus, the concluding language of Count One which reads:

“to wit: permitted one, George Gordon, to go beyond the confines of his cell and use the jail telephone at 10:06 o’clock P. M., on April 4, 1951,”

seeks to specify the manner in which “Stuart Harland * * * having charge of the county jail,”

“Did neglect or refuse to obey or conform to a rule or regulation lawfully prescribed by the Court of Common Pleas * * * for the management and regulation of such jail, or did omit or neglect to perform a lawful duty in respect thereto.”

In conformity with the Yudick decision it is essential that the concluding language of Count One state facts which constitute a neglect or refusal of the Sheriff to conform to a lawfully prescribed jail rule or an omission or neglect to perform a lawful duty in respect to the jail.

It is first essential to determine the. meaning of “neglect” as used in §12886 GC. “Neglect” obviously means something different than “refusal” for the statute outlaws a “neglect” or “refusal.”

“Refusal” means a denial, a declination to do what is [458]*458requested or ordered. A “refusal” is a wilfull, conscious and deliberate act.

“Neglect,” on the other hand, signifies a failure to act which may be unintentional. It is like the term negligence which the Supreme Court has said “does not involve intent or a purpose to do a wrongful act or to omit the performance of a duty.” Tighe v. Diamond, 149 Oh St, 520 at 524.

That the word “neglect” as used in §12886 GC, is devoid of the element of intention is substantiated by the fact that in §12850 GC (which section will be considered in connection with Count Three), the word “neglects” is modified by the word “Wilfully.”

“Neglect as used in §12886 GC, is construed to mean an unintentional failure to act, whereas (as later explained), “wilfully * * * neglects,” as used in §12850 GC, is construed to mean intentionally failing to act.

It follows that §12886 GC may be violated by an unintentional failure to conform to a lawfully prescribed jail rule or by an unintentional failure to perform a duty in respect to the jail.

Since Wilfulness is not an essential element of a violation of §12886 GC, no reason is perceived why a sheriff may not be guilty of a violation of this section wholly as the result of the neglect of a deputy to conform to a lawfully prescribed jail rule even though the sheriff was unaware of and did not consent to the deputy’s neglect.

A sheriff is enjoined by statute (§3157 GC) to have charge of the county jail, to have charge of and to keep safely all persons confined there, to attend to the jail, and to govern and regulate the jail according to any lawfully prescribed jail rules.

Even in the absence of a statute making these duties nondelegable a sound public policy would require that these duties, whose performance is essential to public order, remain with the sheriff where they are placed by law.

But, the principle of non-delegability has statutory sanction. For by §2831 GC, a sheriff is expressly made responsible for a deputy’s neglect of duty and a deputy’s mis-conduct in office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 Ohio Law. Abs. 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harland-ohctcomplgeauga-1951.