State v. McGahey

97 N.W. 865, 12 N.D. 535, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 1
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 97 N.W. 865 (State v. McGahey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McGahey, 97 N.W. 865, 12 N.D. 535, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 1 (N.D. 1904).

Opinion

Cochrane, J.

Appellant, after hearing, was adjudged guilty of contempt, in that “he willfully resisted the execution of a search, warrant (described), and willfully resisted George A. Welch, sheriff of Burleigh county, in making search of the premises, particularly described in said search warrant, in the basement of the Northwest Hotel, in Bismarck, in said Burleigh county,” and was sentenced, to thirty days’ imprisonment in the county jail, and to pay a fine of $200, and, in case the fine was not paid, then to thirty days’' additional imprisonment after the expiration of the first thirty days. He appeals from the judgment. The search warrant, the execution of which he was convicted of resisting, was issued in aid of an equitable action to abate an alleged liquor nuisance, begun by the state’s attorney -of Burleigh county, under the provisions of section 7605, Rev. Codes 1899, in which action appellant was named, as one of the defendants. The complaint in the action was verified, by the affidavit of the state’s attorney, to the effect “that the saméis true, to his best knowledge, information, and belief.” The affidavit for search warrant was also made by George M. Register,, state’s attorney, and its averments are all made on information and belief, and none of them are sworn to positively. Upon this-hearsay foundation an alleged search warrant was issued by the-court, directed and delivered to the sheriff of the county, reciting the papers upon which it was based, and commanding the sheriff at the time of serving the injunction to diligently search the premises described, and carefully invoice the articles found therein, and if, upon such search, intoxicating liquors of any kind should be found, to take the same into his custody, and securely hold the same-to abide the final order or judgment in the action, and also to take- and hold possession of the described premises, and keep the same-closed, until final judgment in the action. The sheriff on the night of January 31, 1903, entered a room in the basement of the Northwest Hotel for the purpose of serving the papers in this case upon the defendants named, and otherwise performing the commands of the search warrant. The sheriff thus describes what occurred r “I found the defendant McGahey in one of the rooms of the basement — the third room from the barber shop, east. He was standing-alongside the table. There were some bottles partly filled with Val Blatz beer. I reached for a bottle of beer, and took it in my hand. The defendant knocked a glass of beer from the table with one hand, and grabbed the bottle with his other hand, and tried to taka [542]*542this bottle away from me. We both had hold of the bottle, and wrestled for possession for some little time, over chairs, tables, and whatever was in the way. I finally got possession of the bottle. I told him several times to let go of the bottle. I told him I would .have him arrested. He did not say anything to me at all. I served .the summons, complaint, affidavit, injuctional order, and search warrant there after the scuffling was done. From the time I made service of the papers upon McGahey, and until he went out of the basement, he did not do anything — only stand around and talk— .and refused to leave the place.”

The defendant, in answer to interrogatories propounded to him in the contempt proceedings, testified: That he knew George A. Welch had been elected sheriff of Burleigh county, and had been acting as such since January 5, 1903. That he was served by said sheriff with copies of the summons and complaint, affidavit, injunctional order and search warrant on the night in question, after and not before, the supposed resistance testified to by Mr. Welch. That Mr. Welch began to search before he served any papers of any kind, and served the papers after the alleged resistance, when defendant said to him, “ ‘If you have a right to search this place, where is your warrant?’ Then he handed me the papers, and ■I took them and placed them on the table.” That he did not know that the sheriff had authority to search the premises, and to seize and take into his possession intoxicating liquors found upon the premises. There was a bottle on the table, and both the sheriff and defendant reached for it at the same time. Defendant did not then know that Mr. Welch had any right to the possession of it, as he had ■ shown no papers, nor read any; and defendant testified : “I did not know he was acting in the capacity of sheriff of Burleigh county at that time, and he did not so stats to me. Some of the contents of the bottle spilled in my effort to retain possession of it.” Appellant did not interfere with or resist the officer in the search after being made aware by the sheriff that he was armed with, and attempting to execute, a search warrant. None of these statements of the defendant were contradicted. The récord clearly shows that appellant, at the time of the acts charged :to him as a contempt, was in a room in the Northwest Hotel, which the complaint alleges he, with another, “kept, used and maintained,” and therefore a place where he had a right to be for .all lawful purposes, and a place the sheriff had no right to enter, [543]*543unless on invitation, or, unless authorized by legal process, neither of which had been furnished him; that the sheriff entered this room, and sought to take possession of a bottle on the table, without showing that he had any right to enter or to interfere with anything in the room. Appellant naturally resisted this seeming trespass, and exhibited as strong a desire for and hold upon the Val Blatz as did the sheriff, until the law officer wrested it from the possession of appellant; and then appellant was notified that the sheriff was acting officially in the discharge of duty, when all interference on the part .of appellant ceased. The acts constituting criminal contempt are classified in section 5932, Rev. Codes 1899; and the acts of appellant, found to be a contempt in this case, unless within the terms of subdivision 4 of this section, are not punishable as such. The statute reads as follows: “Every court of record shall have power to punish as for a criminal contempt persons guilty of any of the following acts and no other: * * * Subd. 4. Resistance willfully offered by any person to the lawful order or process of the court.” The other subdivisions of this section can have no application to the facts of this case; so, if the appellant has not violated the subdivision quoted, his conviction was erroneous and must be reversed.

Assuming, for the purposes of this opinion, that a search warrant is an “order or process of the court,” within the meaning of this statute, the resistance of which may be punishable, as a contempt, when it is willfully offered, and when the order or process is lawful, nevertheless the conviction in this case cannot be sustained. The resistance, under this statute, must have been willfully offered. The term “willful,” when applied to the intent with which an act is done, implies a purpose or willingness to commit the act. Section 7713, Rev. Codes 1899; Freeman v. City of Huron, 8 S. D. 438, 66 N. W. 928. It goes without saying that one cannot form the purpose to resist an order or warrant of which he has no knowledge or notice whatever. The uncontradicted evidence in this case shows that appellant. had no notice or knowledge that the sheriff was armed with the warrant when he seized and sought to retain possession of the bottle. The sheriff had not exhibited his warrant, or made any mention that he had one in his possession, or that he was acting under its authority. The resistance, therefore, was no resistance of the warrant, willfully made. Horan v. State, 7 Tex. App. 183; Johnson v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 N.W. 865, 12 N.D. 535, 1904 N.D. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcgahey-nd-1904.