State v. Yenzer

23 Fla. Supp. 154
CourtCircuit Court of the 2nd Judicial Circuit of Florida, Leon County
DecidedSeptember 17, 1964
DocketNo. 18138
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Fla. Supp. 154 (State v. Yenzer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 2nd Judicial Circuit of Florida, Leon County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Yenzer, 23 Fla. Supp. 154 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

W. MAY WALKER, Circuit Judge.

This is an interpleader proceeding instituted by the state of Florida and Farris Bryant, Ray E. Green, and J. Edwin Larson, in their representative capacities as governor, comptroller, and treasurer, respectively, of the state of Florida, wherein the court has previously granted the plaintiffs’ motion for a decree in their favor on the pleadings and directed them to pay to the clerk of this court the sum of $100,000, the amount of the reward es[156]*156tablished by chapter 57-620, Laws of Florida, Acts of 1957, for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the party or parties, or any of them, responsible for the disappearance of Judge C. E. Chillingworth.

The court has also previously decreed that the plaintiffs be discharged from the cause with their costs, and acquitted and exonerated from all claim of or liability to the defendants, with the further requirement that the non-disclaiming defendants James W. Yenzer, P. 0. Wilber, Donald Miles, William K. Chester and William A. Neely, and Harvey Ford, as guardian ad litem for the non-disclaiming incompetent defendant Ewart G. Brown, interplead and litigate among themselves so that the court could determine which one or ones of them are entitled to receive the balance of said $100,000 after the payment of appropriate costs therefrom.

All of such non-disclaiming defendants have filed pleadings in the nature of cross-claims in which they assert their respective claims to said reward money.

The defendants Edna Y. Trepp and her husband, Joseph Trepp, and Ellen Linnea Jensen, and each of them, have filed an appropriate disclaimer and waiver forever disclaiming and renouncing all right and interest in and to the reward money, and, therefore, have no claim or interest in the result of this proceeding.

The defendant Ewart G. Brown has been duly adjudged incompetent by order entered by the county judge of Palm Beach County on June 19,1958, and by appropriate committment, issued on the same day, has been committed to the South Florida State Hospital at West Hollywood. The committment is still in full force and effect, and the said Ewart G. Brown is still confined at the said mental institution. Harvey Ford, a practicing attorney residing at Hollywood, Florida, has been duly appointed guardian ad litem for said incompetent, and has seasonably qualified, answered, and represented him in this proceeding.

The six non-disclaiming defendants are the sole and only claimants to the reward money. So the question to be resolved is which claimant or claimants of these six are entitled to the reward.

The case has been finally heard, the evidence taken, and counsel for the respective parties have presented their final arguments and submitted the case to the court for consideration and the entry of a final decree.

The evidence discloses, among other things, that on June 15, 1955, the Honorable C. E. Chillingworth, a distinguished circuit judge of the 15th judicial circuit of Florida, and his wife Marjorie Chillingworth, while at their beach home in Palm Beach [157]*157County, disappeared; that the law enforcement officers of the state for a long time thereafter faithfully and diligently, but vainly, sought clues to the fate of Judge and Mrs. Chillingworth; that upon request of Sheriff John Kirk of Palm Beach County the Florida sheriffs’ bureau entered into the investigation of the case about November 17, 1958. Thereafter, following considerable investigation by the sheriffs’ bureau, together with the sheriff’s office of Palm Beach County and together with certain claimants hereinafter specifically mentioned, the case was solved and Floyd A. Holzapfel and Joseph A. Peel, Jr., were arrested for the murder of Judge and Mrs. Chillingworth.

On November 23, 1960, a grand jury impaneled by the circuit court of Palm Beach County returned an indictment charging the said Floyd A. Holzapfel with the first degree murder of Judge Chillingworth and charging the said Joseph A. Peel, Jr. with being an accessory before the fact to said murder. On December 12,1960, Holzapfel pleaded guilty to said indictment in the circuit court of Palm Beach County, and on the same day was duly adjudged guilty of first degree murder as charged in the indictment. On May 3, 1961, the circuit court of Palm Beach County sentenced Holzapfel to death by electrocution for the murder of Judge Chillingworth, the said murder for which he had been convicted. Holzapfel took no appeal from the sentence pronounced against him. Joseph A. Peel, Jr., after a change of venue in his case from the Palm Beach County circuit court to the St. Lucie County circuit court was thereafter duly tried and convicted by a jury of the crime of accessory before the fact to murder in the first degree, with a recommendation to mercy. On April 26, 1961, he was adjudged guilty by the court of such crime and sentenced to the state prison for the remainder of his natural life. He took a timely appeal to the District Court of Appeal, Second District, from the judgment and sentence so pronounced against him and later appealed to the Supreme Court of Florida with the result that the judgment and sentence was affirmed by both appellate courts. (Peel v. State, 154 So.2d 910, and Peel v. State, _ So.2d

It is also noted that the said Floyd A. Holzapfel and Joseph A. Peel, Jr., were duly indicted, tried and convicted, respectively, for the murder and for being an accessory before the fact to the murder of Mrs. Chillingworth. Holzapfel’s conviction in this case, as in the other, was predicated upon a plea of guilty and he did not appeal therefrom. Joseph A. Peel, Jr. also prosecuted an appeal from his conviction in this case to the District Court of Appeal, Second District, and to the Supreme Court, where his conviction for his crime in this case was also affirmed by both appellate courts. (Peel v. State, 150 So.2d 281, and Peel v. State, _ So.2d

[158]*158The evidence further discloses, among other things, that James W. Yenzer, one of the claimants, was born at West Palm Beach on January 11, 1930, and has resided ever since in the state of Florida; that immediately after the enactment of the Act establishing the reward, he became aware of the enactment and the provisions thereof; that thereafter, with full intention and purpose to claim the reward, he conducted on his own behalf, and together with agents of the Florida sheriffs’ bureau, an investigation to obtain information and evidence identifying the party or parties responsible for the disappearance or murder of Judge C. E. Chillingworth; that he met Floyd A. Holzapfel either in March or April of 1956, in Miami; that he was introduced to Holzapfel by Joseph A. Peel, Jr., with whom he had been acquainted a substantial length of time; that during March or April, 1959, he informed Henry J. Lovern, a special agent of the Florida sheriffs’ bureau, that Holzapfel was one of the parties responsible for the disappearance and murder of Judge C. E. Chillingworth, and how the crime had been committed, step by step as related to him by Holzapfel.

Thereafter, on November 13, 1959, the claimant James W. Yenzer made a sworn statement to Henry J. Lovern, special agent of the Florida sheriffs’ bureau, at Tallahassee, in which he related very important information regarding the disappearance of Judge and Mrs. Chillingworth. In addition to other valuable information, the statement includes the following (questions by Mr. Lovern and answers by Mr. Yenzer) —

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Related

Peel v. State
154 So. 2d 910 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1963)
Sumerel v. Pinder
83 So. 2d 692 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1955)
Peel v. State
150 So. 2d 281 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1963)
State v. Malm
123 A.2d 276 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1956)
Glover v. District of Columbia
77 A.2d 788 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1951)
Healy v. Gray
168 N.W. 222 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
23 Fla. Supp. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-yenzer-flacirct2leo-1964.