State v. Coleman

The appellant was charged, May 24, 1922, by information in the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County under Section 6588, as amended, Laws 1921, page 413, with the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor. On May 25, 1922, the Assistant Attorney-General, charged with the prosecution of this class of cases, filed an affidavit with the Clerk of the Circuit Court, asking the issuance of a search warrant, which was ordered by the judge of the circuit court, and the premises of the appellant searched and intoxicating liquor found in an out-house.

Appellant filed a timely motion to quash the warrant on the ground that it was illegally issued and was oppressive and unreasonable and that the search and seizure thereunder was in violation of Section 11, Article 2, of the State Constitution, and contrary to Section 6595 *Page 648 as amended, Laws 1921, page 416. The court heard testimony upon this motion and sustained same, but upon the trial admitted testimony obtained under the authority of the warrant, and the appellant was found guilty and fined $1000 and sentenced to six months in jail. From this judgment he appeals.

The determinative question here seeking solution is as to the validity of the warrant under which the search warrant was made. The general jurisdiction of the circuit court over this class of cases must, under the terms of the statute, be conceded. [Sec. 6594, R.S. 1919.] Succeeding sections (6595-6596) as amended (Laws 1921, p. 417, and Laws 1923, p. 247), but not in regard to the matter here in issue, authorize an Assistant Attorney-General to file a sworn statement with the Clerk of the Circuit Court as a prerequisite to the issuance of the warrant. The record discloses a formal compliance with these requirements. In addition, the place where the intoxicating liquor is alleged to be located is stated; the name of the person charged with its possession is alleged and the property, for the discovery of which the right of search is invoked, is described. Upon this warrant, which was sworn to before the Clerk of the Circuit Court, there is indorsed the following: "Warrant ordered issued May 25, 1922. Sterling McCarty, Circuit Judge." This indorsement made by the judge of the court having complete jurisdiction of the matter in controversy imports verity. Its integrity cannot be questioned by showing an absence of a record entry by the clerk during vacation, of the making of the affidavit and the filing of the same as an application for the warrant. Nor is a like failure on the part of the clerk to note on the record, in conformity with orderly procedure, the order of the judge directing the issuance of the warrant. It is not the contention of the appellant that the judge of the court was not authorized to make this order, but that it conferred no power upon the officer to whom it was directed, in the absence of an order of the court to that effect entered of record. While experience has demonstrated *Page 649 that constant judicial supervision is necessary to the proper discharge of their duties by ministerial officers, a dereliction of duty, in that regard, properly classed as a misprision, cannot be invoked, in the absence of any countervailing reason, to assail the integrity of the court's action.

Difficulty has always been encountered in drawing the dividing line between judicial acts and orders which may be made in chambers and those required to be made by a court. Probably as distinctive a classification as can be made is that which limits the scope of acts done in chambers to those which are incidental to the court as such, and can only be exercised in matters over which the court has jurisdiction. The nature of the warrant here under review is distinctively incidental to a prosecution for the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor. Clothed with power to hear and determine cases of this character, the judge, upon the submission to him in chambers of the affidavit for the warrant which showed upon its face that it contained all of the essential allegations, was authorized in ordering the issuance of same. To hold, in the face of these facts, that judicial power thus exercised, may be nullified by the failure of a ministerial officer to perform his plain duty, would be nothing less than trifling with the administration of justice. While the trial court erred in the quashing of the warrant, the admission of the testimony thereby obtained, and upon which the appellant was convicted, was not error. Substantial in character this testimony sustained the verdict.

No errors committed during the trial were of such magnitude as to prejudice the appellant and the judgment is affirmed. All concur.

Headnote 1: Appeal and Error, 4 C.J. sec. 2287; Searches andSeizures, 35 Cyc. 1268 (1926 Anno). Headnotes 2 and 3: Searchesand Seizures: 2, 35 Cyc. 1266 (1926 Anno); 3, 35 Cyc. 1272 (1926 Anno). *Page 650