Taylor v. Chapman

173 So. 143, 127 Fla. 401, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1459
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 2, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 173 So. 143 (Taylor v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Chapman, 173 So. 143, 127 Fla. 401, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1459 (Fla. 1937).

Opinions

Brown, J.

This writ of error brings before us for review an order, made by Circuit Judge Hal W. Adams as Judge pro hac vice of the Circuit Court for Alachua County, in habeas corpus proceedings, remanding the petitioner to custody. Plaintiff in error contends here, as he did in his petition for the writ, that the information, filed by County Solicitor of Dade County, to which the petitioner plead guilty and upon which he was adjudged guilty and sentenced, wholly fails to- charge any offense agains,^ the laws of this State.

It appears that there was a previous habeas corpus proceedings, in which the information was attacked on the same ground, to-wit, that it failed to charge any offense known to the laws of Florida. This prior proceedings, had before Hon. H. F. Atkinson, senior Judge of the Circuit Court for Dade County, resulted in a similar order, holding the information sufficient and remanding the petitioner to the custody of the sheriff of Dade County, in whose custody he was when said former writ was sued out. It was after this test of the sufficiency of the information by habeas corpus in the Circuit Court (instead of by motion to quash the information in the Criminal' Court, where the prosecution was pending, which was the proper procedure) that the petitioner withdrew his original plea of not guilty, and *404 the judgment and sentence above referred to was entered. But this order of Judge Atkinson’s was not the basis of Judge Adams’ order. Indeed, it was not included in the respondent’s return nor brought to Judge Adams’ attention until more than six weeks after the case had been heard and judgment rendered. Then it was that the respondent filed a petition asking the court to be allowed to file certified copies of the petition for writ of habeas corpus filed before Judge Atkinson and of Judge Atkinson’s order of remandment, and asking that Judge Adams’ order of remandment be amended nunc pro tunc by including therein an order making said papers a part of the record. This petition was denied, and, so far as this record shows, properly so. Generally speaking, an order nunc pro tunc is one by which the court does now what the court intended to clo at the time the matter was originally acted upon but which was at that time inadvertently omitted. Also, clerical errors and misprisions may be thus corrected. See 34 C. J. 71-82. It follows that the order made by Judge Atkinson, and its effect, is not properly before us. True, we have in our decisions given effect to Sections 5441-5443, C. G. L., which make both a judgment remanding, as well as one discharging, a prisoner conclusive until reversed in the manner provided by the statute. D’Allessandro v. Tippins, 102 Fla. 10, 137 So. 231; State v. Hardie, 108 Fla. 133, 146 So. 97; State v. Prescott, 110 Fla. 37, 148 So. 533; State v. Drumbright, 116 Fla. 586, 156 So. 721. But that question is not properly presented for our consideration here.

The information here under attack reads as follows:

“Robert R. Taylor, County Solicitor for the County of Dade, prosecuting for the State of Florida, in the said County, under oath, information makes that William A. Taylor, and another person to the County Solicitor un *405 known, of the County of Dade and State of Florida, on the 20th day of January, in the year of our Lord, one thousand nine hundred and thirty-six, in the County and State aforesaid, did then and there unlawfully, feloniously, and designedly, and with intent to defraud and cheat the Western Union Telepraph Company, a corporation, then and there engaged in the business of sending and receiving telegrams, money and bank credits from one place to another in the United States of America, attempt to obtain and receive from the said Western Union Telepraph Company a sum of money, to-wit: Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($250.00) money of the United States of America, a better and more particular description of said money being to the County Solicitor unknown, said money being then and there the property of the Western Union Telegraph Company, said money so attempted to be obtained and received by the said William A. Taylor and another person unknown to the County Solicitor, with the intent and purpose of converting the same to their own use and benefit; that is to say, that on said date, in said county and State aforesaid, the said Defendant, William A. Taylor, and another person unknown to the County Solicitor, caused to be sent by and through the Western Union Telegraph Company, a corporation, a certain telegram in the tenor and effect' as -follows:
“ 'To Westlake Construction Co., Jan. 20, 1936.
Railway Exchange Bldg.,
St. Louis, Mo.
Wire quick Two Hundred Fifty Dollars care of Western Union here; urgent.
Glenn R. Reed.’

and the said Western Union Telegraph Company, then and there believing that sender of said telegram was one Glenn *406 R. Reed, and being deceived thereby, and relying upon the false personation, and intending to deliver the said money to the said Glenn R. Reed when so authorized by the said Westlake Construction Company, a corporation, of St. Louis, Missouri, then and there sent the said telegram; that thereafter the Defendant, William A. Taylor, fraudulently prepared to then and there identify himself as Glenn R. Reed, called and presented himself to the Western Union Telegraph Company for the said sum of money, but in the meantime the Western Union Telegraph Company and its employee had been advised and learned that the sender of said telegram was not the real and true Glenn R. Reed, and by reason of such advice and information the Western Union Telegraph Company and its employee then and there refused to pay the said sum of money to the said defendant, William A. Taylor.

“That in truth and in fact neither the said William A. Taylor nor person unknown to the County Solicitor were Glenn R. Reed as falsely represented; that the Defendant, William A. Taylor, and person unknown to the County Solicitor, then and there knew the same to be false when' they so made them and did then and there knowingly, willfully and intentionally' make false representation with the intent then- and there to deceive, injure and defraud the Western Union Telegraph Company, contrary to the form of the Statute in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State of Florida.”

We have frequently held that habeas corpus is not a sub-' stitute for a demurrer, motion to quash, or writ of error, and that it is not a remedy for relief from imprisonment under a judgment based upon a warrant, information or indictment which is merely defectively or inartificially drawn. Ordinarily, an indictment or information which informs the defendant of the nature of the accusation against *407 him,- which does not wholly fail to charge an offense, and which enables a defendant to prepare his defense and protects him from a subsequent prosecution for the same offense, will not on habeas corpus be held so fatally defective as to render the judgment of conviction and commitment rendered thereon void and of no effect. Amos v. Chapman, 108 Fla. 360, 146 So. 98; State,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 So. 143, 127 Fla. 401, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-chapman-fla-1937.