52 Kan. 441 | Kan. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On the 18th day of March, 1892, a complaint was filed before a justice of the peace of Stafford county, charging the petitoner and other persons with burglariously breaking and entering the office of the county treasurer of Stafford county, on the 25th day of January, 1891. The complaint contained five counts, charging burglary and grand larceny in different forms. A warrant was issued on this complaint, and the petitioner arrested and taken before the magistrate who issued the warrant. Thereupon, a preliminary examination was held, and Clyne was required to give bond for his appearance for trial, in default of which he was committed to jail. Thereafter, on the 5th of April, 1892, a petition was presented to Hon. J. H. Bailey, judge of the district court, by Clyne, asking discharge from custody. The hearing was had, and the petitioner discharged, for the reason that the evidence was insufficient to show probable guilt of the accused. Afterward, on the 23d day of January, 1893, another complaint was filed before a different justice of the peace, charging the defendant and others with conspiring together to burglariously break and enter the county treasurer’s office, and that, in pursuance of such conspiracy, they did so break and enter it on the 25th day of January, 1891, and did feloniously steal money and records then kept and deposited in said office, the property of Stafford county; the second
On this complaint, a warrant was issued on the same day, and delivered to the sheriff. Clyne was out of the state from the 8th to the 23d of January, 1893. He returned to Stafford on the 23d. The warrant was not served until the 16th day of June, 1893, although the defendant was in Stafford county, where the sheriff could have taken him on almost any day. At the time the warrant was issued, the county attorney supposed that Clyne was out of the state, and he directed the sheriff to hold the warrant until he saw him again. It appears from the evidence of the sheriff that he saw Clyne frequently while he had the warrant in his possession, and could have made the arrest; and it further appears, that the county attorney wished the sheriff to delay service of the warrant, in order that he might find more testimony before another examination should be held. After the arrest was made under the warrant last issued, another preliminary examination was had, and the defendant again held for trial. On this examination, three witnesses not introduced on the hearing before Judge Bailey gave the most damaging testimony which was at any time produced against the petitioner. The petitioner was committed to the jail of Reno county, there being no sufficient jail in Stafford county, and thereafter he made application to the Hon. F. L. MartIN, judge of the ninth judicial district, for his discharge under habeas corpus proceedings. A. full hearing was had on this application, and the petitioner was remanded to the custody of the sheriff. On his petition filed in this court, another writ has been issued, and it is sought to inquire again into the legality of his restraint.
On behalf of the state, it is contended ■ that the fact of the commission of the crime was concealed by the defendant until the 24th of November, 1891. It appears from the testimony that the fact that a burglary was committed was as well known on the morning of January 26, 1891, by the officers as it is now. The crime of burglary, if burglary was committed, was not concealed. The exceptions in the statute refer, first, to the absence from the state or concealment of the person committing the offense; second, to the concealment of the fact that a crime has been committed. They have no reference to concealment of the connection of the party sought to be prosecuted with the crime. It is almost the universal rule that parties guilty of burglary or larceny conceal their connection with the crime, as far as possible.
In this case, the defendant is charged with the crime of burglary and also with grand larceny. The person who was county treasurer at the time of the alleged offense is also charged in the complaint as having been a party to the crime. While the marks on the building and the drill holes in the
'‘Where a grist mill and all its contents, including the books of account of the owners of the mill, are destroyed by one single fire, and the defendant is prosecuted criminally for setting fire to and burning the mill, and, on such charge, is acquitted, held, that such acquittal is a good defense to a subsequent prosecution for setting fire to and burning the books of account.”
It will be observed that in that case there was but one act constituting the offense, and that was setting fire to the building. It was one fire. The burning of the contents of the building, including the books, were but incidents thereof. The burned books but added so much fuel to the general conflagration, and their burning followed as one of the consequences of the act of setting fire to the mill. This case has two possible aspects — one, that the burglary and larceny were committed at the same time, and as a part of the same transaction, and, if so, were connected together in such manner that if one is barred by the statute the other is also; and the other, that the crime, and the only crime really and in fact committed, was the larceny of the money; that a conspiracy was formed and entered into by the petitioner, the county treasurer and others to steal the county funds, and that the burglary was a mere pretense for the purpose of concealing the larceny. If the county treasurer was in fact implicated in such a crime, and if he voluntarily opened the doors of his office, and of the safe in which the money was kept, and, in company with his confederates, took the county money, and then, for the purpose of creating a false impression, they did those acts which indicated that a burglary had been committed, and the county treasurer, in pursuance of the con
• We see no valid ground for his discharge, and he is therefore remanded to the custody of the sheriff of Reno county.