State v. Taylor

20 S.W.2d 960, 223 Mo. App. 883, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 111
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 23, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 960 (State v. Taylor) 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. Taylor, 20 S.W.2d 960, 223 Mo. App. 883, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 111 (Mo. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This is a proceeding by scire facias to enforce the penalty on a forfeited recognizance. Plaintiff had judgment and defendant appeals.

The record shows that on the 8th day of November, 1926, one Orville Taylor was charged with highway robbery and was brought before Joe W. Myers, Justice of the Peace; he became the principal and defendant the bail in the bond on which this proceeding is based, by the terms of which bond, defendant was bound for the appearance of the said Orville Taylor in circuit court on the 26th day of November, 1927. The bond and all proceedings were certified by the justice to the clerk of the circuit court. The principal, Orville Taylor, failed to appear as required and the State now seeks to collect the penalty of the bond in the sum of one thousand dollars.

The answer of defendant contains the following:

“That, prior to the disappearance of defendant, Orville Taylor, the said Jake Taylor, as bondsman for the said Orville Taylor, surrendered the said Orville Taylor to the Constable of Richland Township, Scott county, Missouri, and advised the said Constable where the said Orville Taylor could be found and that the said Constable, in pursuance of the directions of this defendant, went immediately and placed the said Orville Taylor under arrest, accepted such surrender and took the person of said Orville Taylor into his possession and custody, under the charge and information in this cause and referred to in said scire facias.”

At the trial defendant testified to a conversation held with Brown Jewell, the Constable, as follows:

*885 "Orville Taylor is my son. I know Brown Jewell, Constable of Richland Township. I signed the bond in question. My son did not appear in Judge Myer’s Court on the 26th of November. No one called and he was re-arrested before that time. He was gone on the 26th. Brown Jewell came to my home looking for Orville Taylor about the 18th or 19th, some time between the 15th and 26th. He asked me about Orville Taylor and he said he had another warrant for him and I says, ‘Well, Orville Taylor is down about the Frisco Depot or "White Front Restaurant, I expect; he stays down there a big part of the time. If there’s another charge against him I ain going to turn him over to you on this bond; you will find him down about the Frisco; I want to turn him over to you on the bond.’ I think he said he would accept it. He says, ‘If you want to make him bond, follow me to Benton.’ I says, ‘Just take him on to Benton, I cannot do nothing for him, he is making us so much trouble, I can’t follow him and I can’t do nothing for him.’ That is most of the conversation. He came up in a hurry looking for Orville Taylor, asking me where he could find him, and I told him where I thought. ‘I told him Orville give me a good deal of trouble and if there was another charge against him he would find him at the Frisco, and I wanted to turn him over to him on the bond I was on.’ That was the bond for his appearance in Joe Myers’ Court, the bond in controversy here.”

On cross-examination he testified; "I did not get a copy of the bond from the Justice, nor ask for it, I think I have repeated pretty well all the conversation I had with Brown Jewell. I don’t know whether Brown Jewell went to White Front Restaurant or not. I was not there; I understood he went down and arrested him. I have not seen Orville Taylor since then. I do not know where he is.”

Defendant’s witness, Brown Jewell, the constable, was offered as a witness to show that he went to Jake Taylor’s house with a warrant for the arrest of Orville Taylor and that defendant told him that he wanted to turn Orville Taylor over to him under the bond and that he went to the place designated by defendant and there found and arrested Orville Taylor and took him into custody "under the bond before Judge Myers and under the warrant that he had” and that afterwards, Orville Taylor, being in custody ran away from him. Although the trial court sustained an objection to this offer, the witness was permitted to testify as to what occurred on the day he undertook to arrest Orville Taylor as follows:

"By the Court: What did you do with Orville Taylor? A. I arrested him.
"By the Court: Did you read a warrant to him? A. No, sir; I told him there had been a paper issued for him that day, and I had *886 been ordered to bring him to the City Hall by the Sheriff; do you want me to tell all of it?
“¡By the Court: Tell what you did. A. He says, ‘What kind of paper is it?’ I says, ‘I understand there’s been another paper issued for you today, been an indictment, and your father told me to come down and take you; that’s what I will have to do, Orville, I am mighty sorry.’
“Mr. Montgomery: I want to object to that and ask that it be stricken out for the reason it shows it wasn’t an execution of anything else than a capias which he had received from the Sheriff, on an entirely separate matter.
“By tiie Court: Well, I am not striking out anything; of course, the conversation between Orville Taylor and this witness, I don’t know how the State of Missouri would be bound by that.
“Q. You did then take him, as I understand, under the bond?
“Mb. Montgomery: I object to that.
“By the Court: Yes, court will sustain the objection.”

It seems unnecessary to set forth more of the evidence.

Error is assigned because the tidal wms to a jury and that since according to defendant, the hearing on a scire facias on a forfeited recognizance should be before the court and there was no waiver by defendant, a new trial should have been granted on defendant’s motion. Defendant’s theory is that the trial court was prejudiced against him and if he had known at the time of trial that the law required the hearing before the court, without a jury, he would have taken a change of venue. In the first place we find no authority for the proposition that the trial of a proceeding to collect the penalty of a bond on scire facia-s must be before the court, without a jury. The case of State v. Hoeffner, 124 Mo. 488, cited by defendant, merely holds that the defendant in a proceeding of this kind, is not entitled to a jury trial under the Constitution of this State. In other words, the trial court may refuse a jury trial. But it does not follow that if the court and all parties concerned agree to a jury trial, that such proceedings are irregular or void. Defendant consented to the trial by jury and, since this proceeding is purely civil in character and, “but a continuation of an original proceeding to enforce the collection of a debt confessed” (State v. Hoeffner, supra, l. c. 490), defendant was in no wise prejudiced by the jury trial. The only suggestion of prejudice is that defendant might have taken a change of venue had he known the proceeding should have been before the court without a jury. There is a serious question as to whether defendant would be entitled to a change of venue in this matter. [See Sec. 1357, R. S. Mo. 1919; Sutton v. Cole, 155 Mo. 206, 55 S. W.

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Related

State v. Wynne
181 S.W.2d 781 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.2d 960, 223 Mo. App. 883, 1929 Mo. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-taylor-moctapp-1929.