221 Mo. 623 | Mo. | 1909
By this proceeding we are asked to review a commitment of petitioner by tbe circuit court of Buchanan county, for an alleged contempt.
-It appears that when said cause was called for trial by Hon. C. A. Mosman, the judge of said court, the plaintiff announced ready for trial, provided the taxbills called for in the subpoena were in court. Petitioner was then called to the witness stand and was asked .if he had said taxbills and he answered that he did not have them when the subpoena was served and had not had them since that time in his possession or under his control. He declined and refused to answer when he last had them or how shortly before the service of the subpoena duces tecum upon him. Petitioner at all times objected to being interrogated because there was no case on trial. He insisted he was there to obey the subpoena duces, and it would be time enough when the plaintiffs and defendants had announced ready and the trial was begun tó ask him for said taxbills, and plaintiff had no right to subject him to said examination in this manner before announcing ready in the cause and proceeding to trial.
After a lengthy parley between the opposing counsel, the court and the witness, the court finally directed him to answer whether he had said taxbills in his possession when a notice to produce them had been served upon him prior to the service of the subpoena duces, and petitioner refused on the ground that no foundation had been laid for such an order; that section 738, Revised Statutes 1899, provided how plaintiff should proceed, but in any event he had stated he did not have the taxbills when the subpoena duces was served on
Thereupon the following commitment was entered of record and was issued by the court:
“In the Circuit Court of Buchanan County, Missouri, Division No. One.
“Mrs. William F. Keller, plaintiff, vs. “Eva Roth et al., defendants.
No. 18,858.
“State of Missouri, plaintiff, vs. “Samuel S. Shull, defendant.
“Now at this time Samuel S. Shull being in contempt of court, having treated the court disrespectfully in refusing to answer proper and legal questions propounded to him in this case while a witness on the witness stand in the case of Keller, plaintiff, v. Roth et al., defendants, No. 18,858, after it had been repeatedly ruled by the- court that he should answer them and after being admonished by' the court that in the judgment of the court the questions were legal and proper and declining and refusing to answer them or any of them saying to the court that he did not thintr the questions were proper and legal and that he would not answer them, and that he willfully and intentionally refused to answer such questions as were propounded to him after it had been decided by the court that the questions were legal and proper and should be answered by him as a witness;
*626 “It is hereby ordered and adjudged that the said Samuel S. Shull is guilty of contempt of court in treating the court disrespectfully and he is hereby committed to the jail of Buchanan county and the sheriff of said county is hereby commanded to take charge of the body of the said Samuel S. Shull and commit bim to jail and there safely keep him for a period of five days unless he shall in the meantime before the expiration of said five days come into court and make answers in court to the questions propounded to him.
“A true copy — Attest:
“Ambrose Patton, Clerk.
“(Seal.) By J. H. Farris, D. 0.”
By virtue of this commitment the sheriff took petitioner into his custody and committed him to jail and thereupon petitioner sued out this writ of habeas corpus and the sheriff has made his return and both parties have submitted the case to this court upon briefs.
Two grounds are advanced by the petitioner for his discharge, to-wit: First, the court had no jurisdiction to adjudge petitioner guilty of contempt for refusing to answer the questions asked, because the cause of Keller v. Roth was not on trial and no question was up for decision, and the questions were irrelevant to any issue in said cause. Second, because the said commitment is void upon its face for the reason that it fails to state the facts which constitute a contempt of court.
Considering them in their reverse order, does this commitment comply with our statute “which provides, “Whenever any person shall be committed for any contempt specified in this chapter, the particular circumstance of his offense shall be set forth in the order or warrant of commitment”?
Contempt of court is “a specific criminal offense and a fine imposed is a judgment, in a criminal case. The adjudication is a conviction, and the commitment in consequence thereof is execution.” [Church on Habeas Corpus (2 Ed.), sec. 308; Ex parte Kearney, 7 Wheat. 38.] It is in recognition of this principle that the General Assembly, by the foregoing statutory provisions, requires that when a citizen is committed to prison for a contempt the commitment itself shall contain “the particular circumstances of his offense,” or in the language of section 3576, the contempt itself must be plainly and specially charged in the commitment. When the commitment in this case is tested in the crucible of the law it is found to fall far short of the requirements of the statute. Similar statutes are found in other States. If We look at the recitals
The prisoner is discharged.