287 P. 636 | Mont. | 1930
Citing: In re Mo,
From the records submitted to us, the following facts were established: From September, 1924, to and including the third day of November, 1927, petitioner resided with his family in the state of Missouri. Petitioner was then employed as a salesman for the Cudahy Packing Company. In November, 1927, he was transferred by his employer to the state of Arkansas; he left Missouri on November 3, 1927, and drove by automobile to the state of Arkansas to take up his employment in that state, leaving his wife and children in Joplin, Missouri. While in Arkansas, correspondence passed between him and his wife and money was sent by him to her in Missouri; he requested her to come to Arkansas, but this she refused to do. In the latter part of November, 1927, petitioner's wife left the state of Missouri and with the children went to Kansas and established their residence at the home of her mother. Petitioner continued his employment in Arkansas until August, 1928, and then came to Montana, where he has since resided. An affidavit of petitioner's wife was submitted in which she states that her husband has been in Kansas on three different occasions since November 3, 1927; that he attended a convention of the Cudahy salesmen held in Kansas City, Missouri, from December 27, to December 30, 1927, and during that time visited his mother who resides in Kansas City, Kansas, and was also during that time *373 at the plant of the Cudahy Packing Company, Kansas City, Kansas; that he was also in Kansas City, Kansas, visiting his mother on July 31, 1928, remaining for three days; and that he was also there during the month of August, 1929. C.C. Wine made affidavit that he saw and conversed with W.E. Heath in December, 1927, in Kansas City, Kansas.
Petitioner made affidavit denying that he was in the state of Kansas at the time mentioned in the affidavit of C.C. Wine. He admits, however, that he was in Kansas City, Missouri, attending a convention on December 27, 1927, and states that he left that evening for Newport, Arkansas, and at that time he saw C.C. Wine. He denies that he was at the home of his mother on July 31, 1928, but did not deny that he visited her in December, 1927, and did not deny that he was at the plant of the Cudahy Packing Company in December, 1927.
The only question presented for determination is whether, under the foregoing facts, petitioner is a fugitive from justice from the state of Kansas.
Section 2, Article IV, of the Constitution of the United States provides that: "A person charged in any state with treason, felony, or other crime, who shall flee from justice, and be found in another state, shall, on demand of the executive authority of the state from which he fled, be delivered up, to be removed to the state having jurisdiction of the crime." This is also the command of our statute, section 12418, Revised Codes 1921. By section 662, U.S.C.A., Title 18, Congress has provided the procedure to be followed in apprehending a fugitive from justice.
A person cannot be said to have fled from a state in which he is charged with the commission of a crime when he was not within that state at the time the crime is alleged to have been committed. (Hyatt v. People of State of New York, 188 U.S.[1] 691,
It becomes necessary, therefore, to determine the effect of[2, 3] the evidence presented tending to show that petitioner was in the state of Kansas after the third day of November, 1927. The evidence bearing upon this point is unsatisfactory. However, the burden of overturning the finding of the governor that petitioner is a fugitive from justice rested upon him. (Hogan
v. O'Neill,
The case of Ex parte Roberson, supra, is relied upon by petitioner as sustaining his contention that he is not a fugitive from justice. But that case differs from this in that the crime there charged was not a continuing offense, as here. The court in that case made special reference to that fact by saying: "The offense with which petitioner stands accused by the indictment found in Martin county, North Carolina, is not a continuing offense, nor one which might be termed transitory or ambulatory in its nature." *376
The cases of People v. Hyatt,
In State ex rel. Blake v. Doeppe,
The case of People ex rel. Gottschalk v. Brown,
We believe the decision in People v. Brown,
The fact that the petitioner has not been in Allen county,[4] Kansas, since November 3, 1927, is immaterial. If it is essential that the crime must have been committed in that county, as charged, in order to warrant his surrender to the state of Kansas, the answer is that, under the weight of authority, the crime in question here is committed where the wife and children reside (State v. Winterbauer, (Mo.App.)
The proceeding is dismissed.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES MATTHEWS, GALEN and FORD concur.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY, being absent, did not hear the case and takes no part in the foregoing decision. *377