State v. Thomason

285 N.W. 636, 226 Iowa 1057
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 2, 1939
DocketNo. 44548.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 285 N.W. 636 (State v. Thomason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Thomason, 285 N.W. 636, 226 Iowa 1057 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The defendant William Pink Thomason was tried on a county attorney’s information charging him with the crime of carrying pistols in an automobile operated by him and others. He was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment at hard labor in the reformatory at Anamosa for the period of five years. On February 6, 1937, he perfected an appeal to the supreme court and posted an appeal bond with the National Surety Corporation of New York City as surety. The case was affirmed by this court, the opinion being found in 224 Iowa 499, 276 N. W. 619. On January 14, 1938, procedendo was issued, and was filed January 15, 1938, in the office of the clerk of the *1059 district court of Union county. On January 22, 1938, judgment of forfeiture was entered in said cause and notice directed to be given as required by sections 13631 and 13632 of the Code of 1935. On January 24, 1938, the plaintiff filed its petition in the district court, setting out the foregoing facts and that the defendant Thomason had failed to personally appear or surrender himself in execution of the judgment. The petition asked judgment against Thomason, as principal, and the National Surety Corporation, as surety, in the sum of $3,500, the amount of the bond. The appeal bond is in the usual form, duly approved. After the filing of the petition, on February 12, 1938, the surety filed a motion to set aside the forfeiture, alleging that the surety corporation had a meritorious defense; further alleging that it had made a diligent effort to obtain, apprehend, and surrender the principal, and that during the pendency of the appeal the principal was incarcerated in the United States prison at Leavenworth, Kansas, on conviction of a felony; further stating that it had made request and demand upon the United States government for the release of the principal and that such request was denied, but that he would be held for delivery and return to the jurisdiction of the district court at the conclusion of his sentence. The motion offers to perform any and all reasonable conditions that the court may impose upon the remittance of the forfeiture, pay all necessary costs and expenses, and refers to the answer filed in the case. The answer admits the general allegations of conviction and sentence, the giving of the bond, and forfeiture, and sets out.as an excuse the indictment by the federal grand jury and conviction by the United States district court of the southern- district of Illinois for the commission of a felony alleged to have been committed on the 28th day of November 1936, prior to- the date of the offense for which Thomason was convicted in Union county; that on trial Thomason was found guilty and sentenced on June 4, 1937, to imprisonment in the Leavenworth penitentiary, where, on August 7, 1937, he was delivered to the warden of the United States penitentiary and has since been a convict in such institution and alleged that the defendant surety has not been careless or negligent and has done everything possible that it could do to produce the principal-defendant, which it cannot do on account of his incarceration. The answer further sets out the demand on the United States government and the *1060 denial of its request, and the attempt in good faith by the surety to comply with the conditions of the bond. Other allegations are made, but these are the principal statements in the answer. In such answer the surety does not ask that the appeal bond be exonerated at the time of filing, but that the forfeiture be remitted and the bond reinstated to remain in full force and effect until it becomes possible for the surety to perform and comply with the terms and conditions thereof. On motion of the defendant surety the cause was continued until March 7, 1938. On February 19, 1938, a reply was filed by the plaintiff and a resistance to the motion to set aside the forfeiture, admitting the fact of the indictment and conviction by the federal court in Illinois, and pleading that the matters set up in the answer of the defendant surety do not constitute a defense, and that it was then too late to rely on such matters as a defense. By amendment to the answer, filed on March 7, 1938, the defendant surety corporation stated that, after considerable effort, it had secured the release of Thomason from the federal penitentiary, and had delivered the said defendant in open court to the state of Iowa; that it had paid the expense of securing the release, and transportation; that it was unable to procure him earlier; that it had paid all costs; and it again asked that the forfeiture of the appeal bond be remitted and plaintiff’s petition for judgment dismissed. In its amendment to the motion to set aside forfeiture the same facts are shown. On such date of March 7, 1938, the cause proceeded to trial, the defendant Thomason being in court accompanied by a federal officer from the Leavenworth penitentiary. Testimony was taken, and at the conclusion of the testimony the court announced its decisio'n and judgment order was entered that forfeiture be set aside on payment to the clerk of the court by the suret3'- of all costs in the proceedings, together with $500 attorneys’ fees for plaintiff’s attorneys, and the payment of any additional expense in delivering the defendant Thomason to the warden of the reformatory, and that on delivery of said Thomason to the warden the bond be canceled and of no further force and effect. The court further found that the order and judgment for payment of attorneys’ fees and costs had been complied with and the mon^ already paid. From such judgment and order the plaintiff appeals.

The officer from Leavenworth, with the sheriff of Union county, as directed by the court, then proceeded with the *1061 prisoner and the mittimus from the Union county district court to the reformatory, where the prisoner was delivered on the 8th day of March, 1938, into the custody of the warden, as shown by the receipt of such warden to the sheriff. The sheriff, in addition to the mittimus, filed a separate return in which he alleged that the prisoner was turned over to the warden as a federal prisoner. However, the receipt of the warden on the mittimus shows that he received the prisoner from the sheriff of Union county — “William Pink Thomason, who was sentenced to be confined in the reformatory of the state of Iowa, for the term of five years.”

The grounds of plaintiff’s objection to the action and ruling of the court are : (1) That the defendant Thomason has never surrendered himself to the sheriff of Union county, nor has his bondsman, the National Surety Corporation, delivered him to the custody of the sheriff of Union county to submit to ■ the judgment and execution of the district court of Union county., but that the defendant Thomason was a federal prisoner in the custody of the attorney general of the United States and was committed to the reformatory at Anamosa as a federal prisoner; (2) that the imprisonment of the defendant Thomason in the Leavenworth penitentiary was not an excuse why the bail bond should not be forfeited and judgment rendered thereon; and (3) that the trial court was without jurisdiction or authority to commute, pardon, or change the sentence pronounced.

The provisions of law relative to forfeiture of bail are found in chapter 631 of the Code of Iowa, 1935; sections 13631, 13632, 13633, and 13636. The first of these sections provides that:

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Bluebook (online)
285 N.W. 636, 226 Iowa 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-thomason-iowa-1939.