State v. Meysenburg

71 S.W. 229, 171 Mo. 1, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 224
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 71 S.W. 229 (State v. Meysenburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Meysenburg, 71 S.W. 229, 171 Mo. 1, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 224 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

GANTT, J.

I. The circuit attorney evidently was endeavoring to charge an offense under section 2085, Revised Statutes 1899, the gist of which is the corrupt acceptance directly or indirectly of any gift, consideration, gratuity or reward or any promise or undertaking to make the same, by any judge, or justice of the peace, member of the Legislature, or officer or employee thereof, or any other public officer of this State, or of any ■county or city, town or township thereof, under any agreement, that his vote, opinion, judgment or decision shall be given for any particular person, or in any particular manner or upon any particular side, or more favorable to one side than the other, in any question, •election, matter, cause or proceeding which may be pending or be brought before him in his official capacity, or that he shall neglect or omit to perform any official duty or perform the same ivith partiality or favor or otherwise than according to law.

The indictment very fully alleges the official character of the defendant, to-wit, the incorporation of the •city of St. Louis as a municipal corporation and that [22]*22its legislative power is vested in a Council and a House of Delegates, styled the Municipal Assembly of St. Louis; that defendant was a member of said Council and Municipal Assembly, duly elected, qualified and acting as such. He was an officer, the bribing of whom would constitute an offense under the statute and more properly so, because “the danger to which public rights and private property is exposed from dishonest municipal administration is certainly as great as from corruption on the Bench or in the Legislature.” [People v. Jachne, 103 N. Y. 192.]

The averment that there was then and there pending and undetermined before the said Municipal Assembly for the consideration, opinion, judgment and decision of its members and before said Meysenburg as a member thereof, a measure, matter and proceeding in the nature of a proposed ordinance of said city, known as Council Bill No. 44, by which it was proposed to grant certain valuable rights and franchises to the St. Louis & Suburban Railway Company, a railroad corporation, whereby it should be permitted to lay its tracks and run its cars upon and over certain streets, and that it was the public official duty of defendant as a member of said Council, to give his vote, opinion, judgment and decision on said bill or ordinance without partiality or favor, was also well and sufficiently pleaded. Then follows a charge in general terms that defendant corruptly, feloniously, directly and indirectly solicited, proposed, procured, accepted and received a certain gift under an agreement that his vote should be more favorable to the passage and enactment of said measure or Council Bill No. 44, and would perform his official duty with partiality and favor and otherwise than according to law. It is obvious that this general statement falls short of advising the defendant of “the nature and cause of the accusation against him, ’ ’ which our Constitution guarantees every individual charged with crime, in this, that it does not, name the person or corporation from whom he received the gift or bribe or the nature, amount or char[23]*23acter thereof. Had these allegations been made with proper and sufficient clearness and then concluded ‘ £ against the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State,” we think it would have been unobjectionable, but in and of itself, we think it is obviously insufficient and the learned counsel for the State, both in the oral argument and brief, did not insist it was sufficient, but urged that so much of the indictment was merely inducement to that which follows:

Accordingly we must determine whether the remaining portion is sufficient, treating the part we have already considered as mere inducement or surplusage. It is in these words: £ £ That he, the said Emil A. Meysenburg, did then and there unlawfully, corruptly and feloniously, solicit, propose, procure, make and enter into a certain corrupt bargain, agreement and covenant with one Philip Stock (who was then and there the agent and representative of the said St. Louis and Suburban Railway Company, its officers and members and was then and there acting for and in behalf of the said St. Louis and Suburban Railway Company, its officers and members, as he, the said Emil A. Meysenburg then and there well knew), by and under which said corrupt bargain, agreement and covenant a large sum of money, to-wit: the sum of nine thousand dollars, lawful money of the United States, was paid him, the said Emil A. Meysenburg, by the said Philip Stock, as the pretended and ostensible price, consideration and value of certain worthless and unmarketable shares of stock of the St. Louis Electric Construction Company, then and there had and held by him, the said Emil A. Meysenburg, upon the express understanding and agreement between the said Emil A. Meysenburg and the said Philip Stock, that unless and until the said sum of nine thousand dollars was so paid by the said Philip Stock to the said Emil A. Meysenburg, as the said pretended and ostensible price, consideration and value of the said shares of stock he, the said Emil A. Meysenburg, as a member of said Council and [24]*24in Ms said official capacity and character as aforesaid, would and should oppose, resist, withstand, thwart and defeat the passage and enactment of said measure, matter, cause and proceeding and of the said proposed ordmance, then and there as aforesaid pending and brought before the said Council and before him, the said Emil A. Meysenburg, in his said official capacity and character as a member of said Council. Contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and digMty of the State. ’

In this portion of the indictment the defect already noted in the inducement, to-wit, that it did not state from whom Meysenburg corruptly received the gift, gratuity and bribe, nor the amount and character thereof, is cured, and it is sufficiently averred that the corrupt agreement was made with Philip Stock, who was then and there the agent and representative of the said .St. Louis and Suburban Railway Company, its officers and members, and who was then and there acting for and on behalf of said railway company, its officers and members, and that Meysenburg then and there well knew this, and that by and under a corrupt agreement, nine thousand dollars, lawful money of the United States, was paid to him, the said Meysenburg, by the said Philip Stock, and to give the defendant express notice of what the State intended to show and prove, it was alleged that this money or bribe was paid to Meysenburg as the pretended and ostensible price of certain worthless and unmarketable shares of stock of the St. Louis Electric Construction Company, then and there held by him, the said Meysenburg.

So far the pleader was pursuing the rules of good pleading, but the remainder of the indictment fails to charge that this money so received was for a purpose which would make it bribery under section 2085, Revised Statutes 1899, the substance of which we have already copied, in that it nowhere alleges that said money was received by Meysenburg on an agreement either that his vote, decision or opinion would be given in a particular manner, that is, to say, in favor of the [25]*25passage or enactment of said Council Bill No. 44, granting said privileges and franchises to said St. Louis and Suburban Railway Company, or would be more favorable to said Council Bill No.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 229, 171 Mo. 1, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-meysenburg-moctapp-1902.