46 Kan. 679 | Kan. | 1891
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendants, Con. Morrison (whose-full name is Cornelius Morrison) and Thomas Cooney, were convicted in the district court of Jackson county of the offense of having knowingly and willfully obstructed, resisted and opposed the sheriff of said county in the service of an execution and an order to sell personal property in a civil action. The defendant Morrison was sentenced to pay a fine of $200, and the defendant Cooney was sentenced to pay a fine of $150, and they were adjudged' to pay the costs-jointly, and each was to stand committed to the county jail until their respective fines and the costs should be paid; and both appeal to this court.
The first claim of error is, that the court below erred in-overruling the defendants’ motion to quash the information. The statute under which this information was drawn reads as follows :
“Sec. 165. If any person or persons shall knowingly and willfully obstruct, resist or oppose any sheriff, or any other ministerial officer, in the service or execution, or in the attempt to serve or execute any writ, warrant or process, or in the discharge of any other duty, in any case, civil or criminal, other than felony, or in the service or attempt to serve any order or rule of court, in any case, every person so offending shall, on conviction, be adjudged guilty of a misdemeanor, and punished by imprisonment in the county jail for a term not exceeding one year, or by fine not exceeding $500, or by both such fine and imprisonment.” (Act relating to Crimes and Punishments, §165.)
The information under which the defendants were prosecuted, after averring all the necessary preliminary matters,,
“And the said Con. Morrison, Thomas Cooney, . . . then and there being, did then and there unlawfully, knowingly and willfully obstruct, resist and oppose the said R. B. Francis, sheriff as aforesaid, in executing the said order of sale and writ of execution, and in his attempt to proceed with said sale of said personal property thereunder as aforesaid, by then and there knowingly and willfully using loud, profane, vulgar and threatening language towards him, the said sheriff, and language calculated to provoke an affray, and by conducting themselves in a-threatening and boisterous manner, and by intimidating and assaulting said R. B. Francis, sheriff as aforesaid, in his attempt to perform his official duty as aforesaid, and by then and there disturbing the peace and quiet of said R. B. Francis, and preventing him from proceeding with said official sale, by reason of their (the said defendants’) said unlawful acts and conduct, against the will of said R, B. Francis, and against the peace and dignity of the state of Kansas.”
Section 108 of the criminal code, with reference to indictments and informations, reads as follows:
“Sec. 108. Words used in the statutes to define a public offense need not be strictly pursued, but other words conveying the same meaning may be used.”
In the case of The State v. McGaffin, 36 Kas. 315, it is decided as follows:
“As a general rule it is sufficient if an indictment or information charges an offense in the language of the statute; and even the statutory words need not be strictly pursued, but others conveying the same meaning may be used.”
See, also, the case of The State v. White, 14 Kas. 538. In the case last cited it is decided as follows:
“ The common-law rules of construing criminal pleadings*682 have been set aside by our code of criminal procedure, and to that code must we look for the rules to determine the sufficiency of an information or indictment. It is not necessary in an information to use the exact words of the statute in charging an offense. It is sufficient if words are used conveying the same meaning.”
See also the following cases: The State v. Craddock, 44 Kas. 489; The State v. Foster, 30 id. 365; The State v. Hart, 33 id. 218; Madden v. The State, 1 id. 340, 348, 349; The State v. Barnett, 3 id. 250. In the case of The State v. Schweiter, 27 id. 499, 506, it was decided as follows:
“Where the statute makes either of two or more distinct acts connected with the same general offense, and subject to the same measure and kind of punishment, indictable separately and as distinct crimes, when each shall have been committed by different persons and at different times, they may, when committed by the same person and at the same time, be coupled in one count as constituting all together one offense only. In such cases, the offender may be informed against as for one combined act in violation of the statute, and proof of either of the acts mentioned in the statute and set forth in the information will sustain a conviction.”
Section 110 of the criminal code reads as follows:
“Sec. 110. No indictment or information may be quashed or set aside for any of the following defects: First, For a mistake in the name of the court or county in the title thereof. Second, For the want of an allegation of the time or place of any material fact, when the venue and time have once been stated in the indictment or information. Third, That dates and numbers are represented by figures. Fourth, For an omission of any of the following allegations, viz.: ‘ With force and arms/ ‘contrary to the form of the statute/ or, ‘against the peace and dignity of the state of Kansas! Tifth, For an omission to allege that the grand jurors were impaneled, sworn, or charged. Sixth, For any surplusage or repugnant allegation, when there is sufficient matter alleged to indicate the crime and person charged; nor, seventh, for any other defect or imperfection which does not tend to the prejudice of the substantial rights of the defendant upon the merits.”
“ The legislature evidently designed by the code of criminal procedure to simplify pleadings so that the technicalities, which had become so interwoven with the old system, should no longer be used to defeat the ends of justice. . . . The legislature has attempted to close these avenues of escape by the provisions of the code, whether wisely or not it is not for us to consider. It is for courts only to give effect to its provisions according to the rules prescribed by it. . . . The code has specified, in §§ 89 and 90, the requisites of an indictment, but has provided, in § 96, a large class of defects, for the existence of which the indictment may not be quashed or set aside. Now, it must be obvious to anyone reading the indictment in this case, that it does not state the facts constituting the offense in plain and concise language, without repetition, as directed in the second clause of § 89. But the sixth subdivision of § 96 declares that for any surplusage or repugnant allegation, where there is sufficient matter alleged to indicate the crime and person charged, the indictment shall not be quashed or set aside. The 89th and 90th sections are the guides for the pleader, from which he ought never to depart. The 96th section limits the court in the application of the requirements of those sections, and furnishes a different rule for its judgment than it had given the pleader for his guidance in §§89 and 90. By the 6th subdivision of the 96th section, if sufficient matter is alleged to indicate the crime and person charged, the indictment may not be quashed, although it may contain surplusage and repugnant allegations. Now, surplusage and repugnant allegations cannot be that ‘plain and concise language, without repetition/ directed to be used in § 89. Yet the court must disregard such surplus-age when called upon to pass upon the indictment, applying the criterion provided in §§ 89, 90 and 95, as explained and limited by § 96, and we think it will be found that the indictment, though inartificially and clumsily drawn, must be sustained.”
The next alleged errors have reference to instructions given by the court to the jury; but before proceeding to the considation of these instructions, it will be proper to state some of the evidence in the case. Evidence was introduced tending to show, among others, the following facts: In 1890, Reuben B. Francis was the sheriff of Jackson county. On August 18, of that year, he held in his hands an execution and an order of sale against personal property of the defendant Con. Morrison, and about that time he levied upon such property, and advertised the same to be sold on September 1, 1890, at 2 o’clock in the afternoon. On Tuesday, August 26, 1890, he was at Morrison’s house, but Morrison was not at home; Mrs. Morrison and some of the children were there. The sheriff believed that some of the oats that he had previously levied on had been removed, and that Morrison was responsible for their removal. He told Mrs. Morrison that he knew where the odts had gone, and that if Morrison did not give him the money for them he would have him arrested and put in jail. The above is according to the sheriff’s testimony. James Morrison, a son of the defendant, testified that this was on Thursday, August 28, 1890, and that the sheriff, among other things, told his mother, using some profane language, that he would have a warrant for his father, and put him in the penitentiary. This the sheriff denies. Mrs. Morrison at the time was in an advanced stage of pregnancy, and on the Sunday following gave birth to a child. On Monday morning, Judge McAloon, the principal adviser of Morrison, and Morrison and others, procured a warrant from a justice
“ McAloon came to me, and in the presence of all these defendants he said I could not go on with the sale, for the reason that I was under. arrest. . . . Mr. Cooney was standing behind me, and he says, ‘ To come down to a man’s place and do as you have done here, damn you, you will get a rope around your neck before you get away from here.’ . . . £You need not laugh, God damn you; I mean it!’ . . . Mr. Morrison about that time says: £I would like to see any son of a bitch move a hoof of this stuff away,’ or something of that nature. At that time McAloon* took me off over toward the stable, and Morrison followed; came over there and cursed me; called me sons of bitches, and all kinds of names. He came right up in front of me and said: ‘ God damn you! I would like to wipe the ground with you.’ He wanted to whip me, whether or no. . . . He [Morrison] drove Mr. Fellows away from there. . . . He told him, God damn him, he had no use for him there, and to get out from there. . . . He went, and went quick. I seen a revolver in Mr. Morrison’s pants, right in there [pointing to his own pants]; think it was on that side; it was what I took to be a revolver; could see the handle sticking a little above top of his pants. . . . The tone of voice was pretty wicked; think they meant what they said.”
“ Became enraged and' said: ‘ Mr. Francis, I want you to understand one thing right here, you won’t sell a damn thing that is on this place.’ . . . ‘No God damn son of a bitch could come from Holton and take anything off that place.’ . . . Mr. Morrison says [to Fellows] : ‘ What are you doing here? I did not tell you to come here, damn you; get out of here; and he got. ... I heard him [Morrison] say that the sheriff could not sell anything — could not sell anything that was on that place.’ Mr. Swetlick testified that Morrison says: ‘ You don’t come and sell this property; you or no damn son of a bitch from Holton should sell it.’ . . . They were shaking their fists right at the sheriff.”
Mr. Faulk testified that, after the time at which the sale was to take place, Morrison “said that the sheriff came down there to sell some property that belonged to him, and that he stopped the sale and would not let him sell it.” Mr. Fellows testified that, on the day that the sale was to take place, he went there to bid on some of the things to be offered, and “ there was something that I took for a revolver in the pocket of Morrison. I did not care about opposing that thing.” He also testified to Morrison’s threatening demonstrations. Fellows left the place. He testified, “ I thought there would be trouble if I stayed.” Mr. Franze testified that Morrison said that “no Holton son of a bitch, or sons of bitches— don’t know whether he used the singular or plural number,
The court beloAV instructed the jury, among other things, that they could not find the defendants guilty unless they found beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants did, as charged in the information, knowingly and willfully obstruct,
“You are the exclusive judges of the testimony, and of the credibility of the witnesses. If any one or more of them has willfully testified falsely to any material fact in the case, you arc at liberty, but not bound, to disregard the whole of the testimony of that witness. If in considering the testimony you are unable to reconcile it, which would be your first duty, then it is for you to determine which side, when it is directly in conflict, you will believe. You are not at liberty to arbitrarily disregard the testimony of any witness. You should consider it and give it the weight it is entitled to, considering all the surrounding circumstances that throw any light upon it; and it is your duty to consider the interest of the person testifying, if any is shown on the stand; his intelligence, his means of knowledge, his bias in any direction, from friendship or otherwise, in determining the weight of testimony of any witness on any side; and from all such considerations and. any other that in your judgment would throw any light on the value of the testimony of the witness, and from it all, determine its weight. I need not call your attention to the fact that there is conflicting testimony with regard to material matters in the case. If you are convinced that any one of them testified falsely, as some of them must have done, if their testimony conflicts, it is for you to determine which you will believe and give it the weight it is entitled to.”
The last sentence of the above instruction is objected to, but considering it in the light of the testimony and of the other instructions, it cannot be considered as erroneous or materially erroneous. The defendants also objected to other instructions. The court instructed the jury that the question for them to determine was “ whether or not the defendants, or any of them, willfully and knowingly obstructed, resisted or opposed the sheriff in the execution of a lawful duty;” and then defined these various words. In defining the word “willfully,” the court used the following among other language :
“Willfully, in this connection, means that, if they knew the effect of what they were about to do would be to obstruct the officer in the performance of his duty, or such effect might*689 be reasonably apprehended from their acts, then they may be found to have willfully so acted.”
The judge also in this connection instructed the jury as follows:
“And so I say to you, that it is not absolutely necessary to a conviction under this section of the statute that they should, in what they did, have actually intended that no sale should take place, if what they did do would, reasonably considered, prevent a sale. In reference to the claim on the part of the defense, that whatever was done there was in regard to some grievance Mr. Morrison had against the sheriff for misconduct toward his wife at the time when he was not present— I say, if the purpose of these people, Mr. Morrison or his friends, these defendants, was to get up an altercation there with the sheriff, the reasonable consequence of which would be — not that they intended to do so — but the reasonable consequences of which would be that the sale could not take place, then they would be within the statute, although they did not intend, actually intend, to disturb the sale at all. The statute says, if they shall obstruct an officer in the execution of his duty; that would mean, if they put impediments in his way, as getting the property away so that he could not get it for sale, would be obstructing an officer in the execution of his duty. Opposing: That might be done in various ways; by ordering away bidders; giving notice to the bidders that the title was not good ; that the sheriff had no right to sell, and various things of that sort, would be within the meaning of this clause, opposing the sale or resisting an officer in the execution of a writ. In this case, if the sheriff was there to sell the property, and they had prevented him by force from collecting the property together at a place where it could be sold, that would be resisting the execution of this process.”
We cannot say that material error was committed by the court below, and therefore its judgment will be affirmed.