THE STATE v. ROBERT BARKER and AUBREY LEE STOUT, Appellants.
Division Two
June 4, 1929.
18 S. W. (2d) 19
In Commonwealth v. Ross, 13 Pa. Dist. Rep. 493, it is held that a district court has authority to issue such a writ to cause a defendant who is confined in the penitentiary outside of the territorial jurisdiction of the court to be brought before it for trial on an indictment for felony.
In Ex parte Marmaduke, supra, the St. Louis Criminal Court issued a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum, which was served in Cole County on the warden of the penitentiary. The authority of that court to issue the writ was not questioned.
It follows the warden of the penitentiary is ordered to deliver Henry Stocks to the Sheriff of Dunklin County, to be taken there for trial on said indictments. It is further ordered that said sheriff return Henry Stocks to the penitentiary on the termination of said trials. All concur.
H. K. Bente and C. I. Bennington for appellant.
HENWOOD, C.—The defendants were jointly charged, in the Circuit Court of Pettis County, with stealing, in the nighttime, twelve chickens, of the value of $12 from the messuage of Paul C. Schupp. The venue was changed to the Circuit Court of Saline County, where they were tried together, convicted, and sentenced to imprisonment
The State‘s evidence shows that Paul C. Schupp was a farmer, living on State Highway No. 50, about six miles east of the city of Sedalia and one and one-half miles west of the town of Smithton, in Pettis County. His dwelling house was located about fifty yards north of the highway, and upon the same premises, and immediately surrounding his dwelling house, were a group of buildings, including his chicken house and barn. The dwelling house of W. E. Lamm was about thirty yards south of the highway and immediately opposite the premises of Schupp. Lamm and his wife and son were returning from Smithton in their Dodge coupe on July 22, 1927, between ten and eleven o‘clock P. M., when they noticed an old Ford touring car headed east and standing on the south side of the highway about 120 yards east of Schupp‘s house. The front lights of the Ford car were “dimmed,” and it had no license plate on the rear end and no tail light. They saw a man sitting in the car, wearing a blue shirt and a “light looking” cap. Soon after reaching his home, Lamm heard chickens squawking in the vicinity of Schupp‘s chicken house. He called his son, got his shot-gun, and he and his son crossed the highway and called Schupp. About the time Schupp joined them, they heard chickens squawking again in the vicinity of Schupp‘s meadow, east of his house. Shortly thereafter, they heard chickens squawking a third time in the vicinity of the Ford car, and then heard the slam of a car door in that direction. The Ford car started east on the highway, followed by Schupp, Lamm and his son in Lamm‘s Dodge coupe, and Mrs. Lamm telephoned to the sheriff‘s office at Sedalia. Lamm‘s son was driving the Dodge and both Schupp and Lamm were armed with loaded shot-guns. About three-quarters of a mile east, they overtook the Ford car and passed it. At the junction of the highway and the road leading southeast into Smithton, the Dodge was turned around and stopped, facing west, about a quarter of a mile east of the point where they passed the Ford car. Schupp and the elder Lamm got out of the Dodge, with their shot-guns, and shouted to the occupants of the Ford to stop, as the Ford approached, but it moved on with increased speed. The chase was renewed, and then the occupants of the Ford car threw out of their car four sacks of chickens, but kept on going. Three shots were fired in the direction of the Ford car and it was driven to the side of the highway and brought to a stop. The defendants were in the Ford car, and the driver of that car, the defendant Stout, was identified as the man who was sitting in that car when the Lamm family observed it, standing on the side of the highway near their home and the home of Schupp, a short while before. Chicken feathers were
I. It is contended that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the conviction of the defendants in this case. We do not agree with counsel in this contention. At short intervals, the squawking of chickens was heard at Schupp‘s chicken house, again in the meadow east of the chicken house, and again in the vicinity of the Ford car which was standing on the side of the highway. Then a car door was slammed and the Ford car started east. The occupants of the Ford car increased the speed of their car when commanded to stop, and it required a hot chase and three loads of hot shot to convince them that their attempt to escape was hopeless. In their flight, they threw four sacks of chickens from their car. It was the same Ford, with no rear license plate and no tail light, which had been observed by the Lamm family a short while before, standing about 120 yards east of Schupp‘s premises. The defendant Stout was identified as the man who was sitting in the Ford car at that time, wearing a “light looking” cap and a blue shirt. The defendant Barker was with Stout in the Ford car when it started east and at the time of the capture. In two of the sacks mentioned, twelve white plymouth rock hens were found. These twelve chickens were fresh and the sacks “cool and dry.” This means that they could not have been in the sacks long on a midsummer night. Schupp had only white plymouth rock chickens on his premises. By actual count, he had eighty-six before and seventy-four after the alleged theft, exclusive of the twelve in question. When turned loose in Schupp‘s chicken house, these twelve chickens “went on back, to the back of the henhouse.” Later that night, some of them were on the roost, and all of them were on the roost the next morning, “but the other (captured) chickens was all on one side setting below.” When turned out of the chicken house the next morning, these twelve chickens were “familiar with the rest of them.” In other words, they seemed to be at home, and were so treated by Schupp‘s flock. This method of identifying chickens,
II. It is also contended that the trial court erred in giving the State‘s instructions numbered 1, 3, 4 and 5. Instruction 1 is attacked on the ground that there was no evidence upon which to base it. By this instruction, which followed the language of the information, the jury was authorized to convict the defendants upon finding all facts necessary to establish the offense charged as defined by the statute. [
III. The defendants further assert that the prosecuting attorney, Mr. Couey, and the special prosecutor, Mr. Lamm, made improper
The information and the verdict are sufficient in form and substance, and we find no reversible error in the trial proceedings. The judgment is affirmed. Davis and Cooley, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by HENWOOD, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
