126 Ind. 24 | Ind. | 1890
— This action has for its foundation a recognizance executed by the appellants to the appellee to secure Baldwin’s attendance in the Blackford Circuit Court to answer for contempt. The circumstances, in brief, are as follows :
This action was commenced in the April term, 1888, of the Grant Circuit Court, and before the close of the term the appellants appeared and submitted to a rule to answer, and the cause was continued. Thereafter, and at the September term of the court, they moved the court for a stay of proceedings, that they might go into the Blackford Circuit Court and make an application to set aside the entry declaring a forfeiture of the recognizance. This motion the court overruled, and the appellants saved an exception.
After the court had refused the motion to stay proceedings, the appellants filed a plea in abatement; this plea was challenged by a demurrer, which the court sustained, and the appellants saved an exception.
Thereafter the appellants filed an answer in bar; to this answer the appellee addressed a demurrer, which the court sustained, and an exception was saved ; the appellants then filed an additional answer, to which a demurrer was submitted and sustained, and they excepted.
Upon appellants refusal to answer further, the court rendered judgment, for want of an answer, for the amount named in the recognizance.
The errors assigned are: The court erred in overruling the motion to stay proceedings; in sustaining the demurrer to the plea in abatement; the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute á cause of action ; the court erred in
The motion to stay proceedings was properly overruled. The facts upon which the motion rested entitled the appellants to no such relief. Had the appellants been at all diligent they would have known of the disposition that had been made of the proceedings for contempt in time to have made their application to the Blackford Circuit Court, and had a hearing before the commencement of the term of the Grant Circuit Court at which they made their motion. This court will take j udicial notice of the fact that there was an intervening term of the Blackford Circuit Court between the April and September terms of the Grant Circuit Court. But the entry of forfeiture did not conclude the appellants from making any defence to this action which they would otherwise have had. The entry was a condition precedent to a maintenance of the action by the State, but it was in no way a hindrance to a complete defence by the appellants, if for any reason they were not liable.
The cause was afterwards continued, with a rule to answer standing against the appellants, and in the meantime, as their answer thereafter filed discloses, they presented their application to the Blackford Circuit Court, obtained a hearing and an adverse ruling ; this being true, the appellants were not injured by the ruling of the court if it had been erroneous. The answer in abatement was clearly bad. There was nothing stated in it tending to show cause for an abatement of the action; the facts pleaded, so far as material, went to the merits of the action and not to its abatement. But after the hearing in the Blackford Circuit Court there was nothing left for the plea in abatement to rest upon ; the appellants were, therefore, in no way injured by the ruling of the court had the plea in abatement been good.
There was no demurrer addressed to the complaint, but if there had been our conclusion as to its sufficiency would
The subpoena was personally served on Baldwin, and his failure to appear before the grand jury as commanded was contempt, for which the court had power to summarily punish him, except he purged himself thereof. This he could do when the time came to answer by appearing and offering • to the court some reasonable excuse for his failure to obey the command of the writ.
The appellants insist that the subpoena was not a legal process, and hence Baldwin was not bound to obey it. It is contended that there is no authority given by statute for a subpoena to issue for witnesses to appear before the grand jury. And it is probably true that there is no statute which in express language directs the clerk of the court to issue subpoenas for witnesses to appear before the grand jury, but we think the authority clearly appears by implication. The same may be said as to witnesses required to appear at the trial of a criminal prosecution.
Section 1797 provides that witnesses on behalf of the State or defendant, in criminal prosecutions, may be compelled to attend and give testimony in open court.
Section 1858 declares that the defendant, in case of a conviction, shall not be taxed with costs for the mileage or attendance of witnesses summoned by the State whose names were not endorsed on the indictment or information.
Section 1682 empowers the sheriff to execute warrants and serve subpoenas.
Section 1671 requires that the names of all the material witnesses must be endorsed on the indictment, but that other witnesses may afterwards be subpoenaed by the State.
Section 1785 gives to the accused, in a criminal case, the right to have compulsory process for obtaining his witnesses.
Section 1417 authorizes the courts to make allowances for necessary expenditures incurred under their order to women,
Section 1664 gives authority to compel the attendance of witnesses before the grand jury.
In view of these several provisions it can hardly be claimed that the clerk of the circuit court, whose duty it is to issue all processes for the court, is not authorized to issue subpoenas to be served upon witnesses in criminal cases in the absence of an express statute conferring such authority. Such a holding by this court would be in opposition to the evident intention of the Legislature, the long-continued practice to the contrary, and would go very far to obstruct a proper enforcement of the law against those who violate it.
When we consider the criminal code as an entirety, and look at the statutes regulating the duties of clerks of the circuit and criminal courts, we have no difficulty in reaching a conclusion as to what is the proper process to secure the presence of witnesses in all kinds of criminal proceedings, and by whoever issued.
We are forced to the conclusion that the proper process for witnesses in all cases is a subpoena issued by the clerk. It is conceded that this is true as to witnesses whose attendance is required upon the trial in court. We can imagine no good reason for a different practice as to witnesses whose attendance is required before the grand jury, and none has been suggested.
Section 1417, cited above, is none the less applicable to witnesses summoned to appear before the grand jury than before the court, and has been universally construed as alike apjfiicable. But it is not improper to consider the provisions in the civil code in giving construction to the provisions found in the criminal procedure act, and when we do this we find that a subpoena is the proper process and the only one recognized for summoning witnesses to testify in any matter where the testimony of a witness is required. But if there was otherwise any doubt as to the correctness
Section 2036 makes it a criminal offence for any person to disobey a subpoena or citation, but expressly provides that the creation of the offence shall not prevent summary proceedings for contempt.
Section 1322, which is a later act than sections 1007 and 1013, supra, expressly provides that the circuit courts shall have full authority to punish by fine and imprisonment, or either, all contempts of their authority and process, in any matter before them, or by which the proceedings of the courts or the due course of justice are interrupted.
We think it very clear that the Legislature has not abridged, or attempted so to do, the power of the courts to summarily punish as for contempt persons who have disobeyed its process by failing to appear ’as witnesses either in court or before the grand jury. The power of the coufts to punish for contempt those who disobey their process is an inherent power and one which can not be taken away or abridged except by organic law.
In Williamson’s Case there had been a conviction for con
That a proceeding for contempt, because of the disobedience of the process of the court, is a criminal proceeding, and, therefore, bailable, there can be no question. All violations of the criminal statutes, except murder and treason, are bailable under our Constitution and laws. Section 17, Bill of Rights, State Constitution.
In New Orleans v. Steamship Co., 20 Wall. 387, the court said: “ Contempt of court is a specific criminal offence. The imposition of the fine was a judgment in a criminal case. That part of the decree is as distinct from the residue as if it were a judgment upon an indictment for perjury com
We find no infirmity in the complaint.
The original answer is substantially the same as the additional paragraph, and if one is bad the other is necessarily so.
There is an absence of any averment that Baldwin at any time presented himself to the Blackford Circuit Court in answer to the proceedings in attachment, and for some unaccountable reason it does not appear that Overman ever offered to surrender his principal upon a bail-piece in discharge of his liability. The paragraphs of answer are bad for these if for no other reasons.
We find no error in the record.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.