185 Mo. 102 | Mo. | 1904
On the 11th day of August, 1903, there was filed in the circuit court of Butler county an information on behalf of the prosecuting attorney, charging the defendant with a violation of section 2043, Revised Statutes 1899. The information contains four counts. The defendant was convicteduponthe second andfourth counts, and his punishment assessed at three years in the penitentiary on each count. No motion to quash was, filed, and no bill of exceptions has been presented to this court for review. We, therefore, have the case here on the record proper.
The second and fourth counts of the information upon which the defendant was convicted are as follows:
“And for another and further count to this information again comes R. H. Stanley, prosecuting attorney within and for the county of Butler and State of Missouri, and upon his oath of office, information and belief informs the court that on or about the 14th day of June, 1901, at the county of Butler and State of Missouri, a certain criminal causd was then and there pending in the circuit court of said Butler .county, between the State of Missouri, plaintiff, and Alexander .Sanders as defendant, in which said cause the said Alexander Sanders was charged by and upon an information filed by the prosecuting attorney of said Butler county, with murder of the first degree, for the killing of one John E. Dacus, the said circuit court of Butler county then and there having jurisdiction to hear and try said cause; that on or about the said 14th day of June, 1901, a certain jury.of said county were then and there duly summoned, challenged and impaneled, sworn and qualified to try the issues joined in said cause then and there pending in said court; that R. P. Crady, M. L. Harmon, George Martin, J. B. Lacy, Mon
“And for another and further count to this information again, comes R. H. Stanley, prosecuting attorney within and for the county of Butler and State of Missouri, and upon his oath of office, information and belief ■ informs the court that on or about the 14th day of Junej 1901, at the county of Butler and State of Missouri, a
OPINION.
Appellant is not represented in this court, there is-no brief or suggestions of any kind indicating any defects in this record;'however, under the law, it is made our duty to examine the record, and we will give the defendant the benefit of the performance of that duty.
The fourth count of the information charges an attempt to corrupt one Bob Bice, who had been summoned as a ’juror in the case of State of Missouri v. Alexander Sanders. The information in that count substantially charges every element of the offense, and is in harmony with the approved precedent in case of State v. Williams, 136 Mo. 293. Hence, there is no reason appearing upon the record for setting aside the verdict upon that count.
The second count presents a more serious proposition. The statute upon which this prosecution is based (sec. 2043, R. S. 1899), provides: “Every person who-shall corrupt, or attempt to corrupt, any other person summoned or sworn as a juror ... by giving or offering to give any gift or gratuity whatsoever, with intent to bias the mind of said juror ... or incline him to be more favorable to one side than the other,, in relation to any matter, cause or proceedings which may be pending in the court to which said juror shall have been summoned . . . shall on conviction be punished as in the next preceding section is prescribed. ’ ’
This count now being considered, in due form charges that the jury (naming each one of them) was duly impaneled, sworn and qualified to try the ease of State v. Sanders; then follows the vague and indefinite
We are unable to give our sanction to the form of the presentation of so serious a charge as is contained in the second count of this information. This count, as to the most essential elements of the offense contemplated by the statute, is so vague and indefinite that defendant should not have been required to plead to it. A person accused is entitled by the terms of the bill of rights, article 2, section 22, “to demand the nature and cause of the accusation’’.against him, and unless the indictment gives this information, it does not answer the end the Constitution requires it should accomplish.
Sherwood, J., in State v. Stowe, 132 Mo. l. c. 204, in treating of an indictment for obtaining property under the false pretense that the defendant was the real, legal and absolute owner of property he was offering in exchange for the property obtained, when it was incumbered by a mortgage, very clearly indicates that an indictment may be invalid for the reason alone that it is vague and indefinite. The learned judge said in that case:
‘ ‘ The charge in the indictment under consideration •is vexatiously vague and indefinite in that it does not
“In Indiana, Keller was prosecuted for obtaining personal property under false pretenses in regard to certain real estate described as being ‘a house and lot of ground in the city of Indianapolis,’ and it was averred that Keller represented that a certain incumbrance for $500 was the only lien on the property. In negativing the truth of this allegation it was averred that the ‘lien and mortgage of $500 on the said house and lot of ground for the purchase-money thereof as aforesaid, was not the only lien and incumbrance then upon said house and lot of ground, hut there were various and numerous other liens thereon, older and prior to the said lien of $500, amounting in the aggregate to $2,000, ’ etc. Speaking on the ■ subject of the insufficiency of such an indictment, Buskirk, J., said: ‘ The first averment is very vague and indefinite. There is no sufficient description of the real estate alleged to have been owned and sold by the appellant. Nor is the name of the purchaser given. Criminal charges must he preferred with reasonable certainty, so that that the court and jury may know what they are to try, of what, they are to acquit or convict the defendant, and so that the defendant may know what he is to answer, and that the record may show, as far as may be, of'what he has been put in jeopardy. The averments should he so clear and distinct that there could he no- difficulty in determining what evidence was admissible under them.’ ...
“Chitty, when spealdng of an indictment, says: ‘The first general rule respecting indictments is, that.
“Elsewhere it-is said: ‘Certainty may he defined to he a clear and distinct setting down of facts, so that they may be understood both by the party who is to answer the matters stated against him, the counsel who are to argue them, the jury who are to decide upon their existence, and the court who are the judges of the law arising out of them. [King v. Griffith, 3 Mod. 201.]-’ ”
' It will he observed, that in this count the names of the twelve jurors qualified and sworn to try the cause are given, and then it is charged that the defendant feloniously corrupted some members of that jury, their names being unknown to the prosecuting attorney. It is essential, under the statute creating this offense, that the corruption must he in respect to a juror who has been summoned in the cause, hence- his name is known and it must be alleged. This count of the information is insufficient for the reason that it leaves the defendant in a position to guess what members of the jury the State will upon the trial undertake to prove that he corrupted. This is not in compliance with the provisions of the organic law of this State, which gives the defendant the right to demand the cause and nature of the accusation against him.
It is not sufficient, in charging the offense created hy the statute, to charge that the defendant corrupted some members of'the jury qualified and sworn to try the cause; the names of the jurors must be alleged. The charge, “Some of the members of the jury,” without naming them, may he treated .as a mere conclusion of
The essential element of the offense defined by the statute upon which the second count is predicated, is not only that some person was corrupted, but that person must be a juror, and it can only be known that he was a juror impaneled in the case by alleging his name.
The charge of “giving to the jurors certain money and property, the exact amount, kind and character of which was unknown to the prosecuting attorney” is well enough, and there can be no substantial objection to the charge in that form. The essential element of that part of the charge is the giving of money and property, and the fact that the amounts were unknown to the informant and not stated can not affect any substantial right of the accused. He is notified that he must meet the charge of giving money and property to certain jurors, and it is apparent that the amount of such money o.r property, whether large or small, can not in any way interfere with his preparation for trial.
. The defect in the second count of the information was not waived by failure of the defendant to move to quash it or to arrest the.judgment. The cases cited by
This information will not support the judgment of conviction upon it for the reason that it fails to charge definitely essential elements of the offense, and this defect is apparent upon the face of the information, and is a part of the record proper in this cause, and is ■open to examination for the first time in this court. [State v. Stowe, supra.]
The judgment in this cause is erroneous for the reason that the defendant was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary, instead of ■ three years, for the offense charged in the fourth count, of ■which, as far as appears from the record proper, he was legally convicted.
This judgment should not be reversed or set aside ■on account of this error, but in pursuance of the provisions of section 2720, Revised Statutes 1899, this court will sentence the defendant for the correct length of time, as is shown by the record. And proceeding to perform this duty, it is ordered and adjudged by the court thát the defendant, Jefferson Nunley, be confined in the penitentiary of this State for a term of three years, ■and that the marshal of this court arrest the said defendant without delay, wherever he may be found in this State, and transport him to the State penitentiary •of the State of Missouri and deliver him to the Warden thereof, there to be imprisoned for the period of three years.