This action was brought by the board of county commissioners of Adair county for the removal of plaintiff in error from the office of sheriff of said county. The petition filed alleged in 13 counts the willful maladministration and corruption in office and failure to account for all funds coming into the defendant's hands. On the trial of the cause, counts 7, 8, 9, and 11 were dismissed. On March 20, 1926, after a trial by jury, a verdict of guilty was rendered as to counts 2, 3, and 10, and a verdict of not guilty was rendered as to counts 4, 5, 6, 12, and 13. Upon the verdict of the jury the court rendered judgment removing the defendant Tom McCasland from the office of sheriff of Adair county, and after a motion for new trial was filed and overruled the defendant perfected this appeal.
The counts upon which the defendant was convicted are as follows: Count 2, being that McCasland, as sheriff, permitted one Led Girdner to run at large during the time he was ordered committed to the county jail for violation of the liquor law; count 3, being that McCasland, as sheriff, permitted one Charley Worley to run at large during the time he was committed to the county jail for a violation of the liquor law; count 10, being that McCasland retained one Led Girdner as deputy sheriff in his office during the time the said Led Girdner was under a sentence for violation of the liquor law and under commitment to serve a term of 30 days in said county jail and pay a fine of $50.
Evidence offered on behalf of the state shows that Girdner was on September 12, 1925, sentenced to serve a term of 30 days in the county jail of Adair county and to pay a fine of $50; that ten or twelve days after such sentence, and prior to the expiration of such sentence, Girdner was seen in a cow pasture adjoining the town of Stilwell; that Girdner was then carrying a gun. C. A. Mallow testified he saw Girdner on the streets of Stilwell almost every day during the months of September and October, and that Girdner helped make an arrest in Stilwell between September 12, 1925, and January 1, 1926 Mallow testified he saw Charley Worley nearly every day on the streets of Stilwell. Witnesses Bouquet and Brannon testified that in October, 1925, Girdner helped make a raid in Adair county some 12 or 15 miles from the county seat. The evidence shows that Girdner also arrested one Baxter Sanders on December 24, 1925. John Hughes testified that he was working prisoners on the road from September 7th to September 20, 1925; that he went to the sheriff's office at the courthouse to get the prisoners in the morning and returned them to the jail in the evening, and that on many of these occasions he saw Girdner sitting in the sheriff's office, and that he saw Charley Worley around the town of Stilwell nearly every day during that time; that he never saw Girdner or Worley in the county jail of Adair county, though he was frequently there to get the prisoners to work on the road; that on one occasion he asked Sheriff McCasland if he could not work the prisoner Worley on the road, and that McCasland asked Deputy Sheriff Patterson where Worley was, and Patterson told McCasland that Worley was up at his (Worley's) store working on the books, and that McCasland told the witness to go ahead that day without Worley and that he could take him the next morning, but that he never at any time either saw Worley in jail or worked him on the road. Bill Barker testified that he saw Girdner on the streets of Stilwell nearly every day between September 12, 1925, and January 1, 1926, and that he saw Worley nearly every day on the streets of Stilwell from July, 1925, to the date of this trial, March 18, 1926. Several other witnesses testified that they were arrested by Girdner between the dates of September 12, 1925, and January 1, 1926. Worley, as witness for the plaintiff, testified that he was convicted of violating the liquor law and sentenced to serve 60 days in jail and pay a fine of $400; that he was committed to jail on October 21, 1925, and stayed in jail one night under said commitment; that he cooked for the prisoners of the jail 23 days, but went home every night during said time, and spent the night at home, and that he worked in his store at Stilwell during the 23 days he was cooking, except at mealtime, and that after he cooked for the prisoners 23 days be got busy in his store and did not come back, and that he had been at liberty since and had not paid his fine or cost; that Sheriff McCasland asked him about paying the fine while he was cooking; that he saw McCasland frequently on the street during that time. Girdner testified for the defendant that he served 38 days in jail, but that he spent only a few nights of that time locked in jail; that he swept the courthouse and cooked and stayed in the kitchen; that he went to his home, 12 or 15 miles from the county seat, alone; *Page 105 that he frequently sat in the sheriff's office and talked; that he served several processes and acted as deputy sheriff from November 1, 1925, to January 1, 1926, and made several arrests and searched one place before his fine had been paid or served out.
The defendant McCasland testified that he did not know whether Worley was in jail or out during the time he was under commitment and did not know how many days Girdner served of his sentence.
There was no evidence offered to show that Worley served his time in jail, but at the time of trial he was still at large notwithstanding his fine had not been paid.
For reversal it is contended that the court erred in overruling the motion to quash the petition on the ground of insufficiency. It is said that the resolution authorizing the proceedings for removal was signed and passed upon by the chairman of the board of county commissioners and one member thereof only, and without the participation of the third member of the board of county commissioners.
The record does not contain the resolution passed by the said board, neither is there any evidence that said resolution was voted upon by the number and in the manner stated. The petition for removal is shown by the record to have been signed by the county commissioners of Adair county, by O. H. Worley, chairman. There is a motion on behalf of defendant to quash the petition. The motion is not attested and is signed by the attorney for the defendant.
Plaintiff in error bases his argument upon section 5783, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921, which is as follows:
"When the board of county commissioners are equally divided on any question, they shall defer a decision until the next meeting of the board, and then the matter shall be decided by a majority of the board."
There is no evidence that the board of county commissioners were equally divided. The resolution of the board of county commissioners not being contained in the record, we do not know the manner, nor the time when the final decision of the board of county commissioners was made.
See Mahr v. Board of County Commissioners, 26 Okla. 628,110 P. 751.
We indulge the presumption that officers do their duty.
We think the contention is without merit.
It is next contended that the court erred in refusing to permit the plaintiff in error to prove that it was the custom of sheriffs of Adair county to permit prisoners to run at large.
Plaintiff objected to the proof of the custom on the ground that custom or usage could not vary the terms of a positive statute of the state.
Section 5898, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921, is as follows:
"The sheriff shall have the charge and custody of the jail of his county, and all the prisoners in the same, and shall keep such jail himself, or by his deputy or jailer, for whose acts he and his sureties shall be liable."
Section 1663, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921, is in part as follows:
"Any sheriff, coroner, clerk of a court, constable or other ministerial officer and any deputy or subordinate of any ministerial officer, who either: First. Willfully or carelessly allows any person lawfully held by him in custody to escape or go at large except as may be permitted by law; * * * is guilty of a felony."
Section 8328, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921, provides that district judges shall prescribe the rules for the governing of jails, and section 8332. Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921, provides that the sheriff shall have charge of the county jail of his county and all persons by law confined therein, and that it is the duty of such sheriff to conform in all respects to the rules and directions promulgated by the district judge as provided in section 8328, supra.
The record shows that the district judge of Adair county promulgated a rule for the governing of the Adair county jail, the same being rule No. 16, as follows:
"No prisoner shall, under any circumstances, be made a trusty, or be permitted to leave the jail for any purpose unaccompanied by a legal and qualified guard except under express order of the district court. Sheriffs shall place copy of this rule in each room and cell of the county jail and send one copy each to the Secretary of State and the Commissioner of Charities and Corrections."
It is apparent that the custom offered to be proved would be in direct violation of the statutes and the rule promulgated under them.
In First Nat. Bank of Byars v. Eldridge et al., 26 Okla. 538,109 P. 62, it is stated:
"It is well settled that usages cannot be held to subvert the settled rules of law." *Page 106
In the case of O., N.M. P. Ry. Co. v. Downey,116 Okla. 253, 244 P. 173, it is said:
"A custom or usage repugnant to the express provisions of a statute is void, and, wherever there is a conflict between a custom, or usage and a statutory regulation, the statutory regulation must control."
In this the trial court did not commit error.
It is next contended that the court erred in not requiring plaintiff to prove the guilt of defendant beyond a reasonable doubt. It is urged that the court erred in instructing the jury that the burden was on the plaintiff to prove the allegations of the petition by a clear preponderance of the evidence, and that the court should have instructed that the plaintiff was required to prove the allegations of the petition beyond a reasonable doubt. The plaintiff in error relies upon section 2404, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921, which is as follows:
"The trial must be by jury and conducted in all respects in the same manner as the trial of an indictment for a misdemeanor."
It is true that in the early case of Maben v. Rosser,24 Okla. 588, 103 P. 674, this court held:
"By the phrase, 'conducted in all respects in the same manner as the trial of an indictment for a misdemeanor,' it was intended to provide that in the introduction of evidence, as to the degree of proof required and in the giving of instructions to the jury, the rules of law applicable in a trial upon an indictment for a misdemeanor should apply."
And in that case it was held that a proceeding to remove an officer under the provisions of article 4, chapter 68, Wilson's Rev. Ann. St. 1903, is not a criminal, but a special proceeding. That case bears out the contention of plaintiff in error, but it was not necessary to the decision of that case that the allegations of the petition for removal must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt, for the contention there was that if the proceedings be not a misdemeanor in the technical sense, it must be tried in some court that had power to empanel a jury of six men and, therefore, would have to be tried in the county court and not in the district court.
We think that decision, in so far as it deals with the degree of proof or the giving of instructions, obiter dictum.
In the case of Freas v. State, 109 Okla. 205, 235 P. 227, an action brought for the removal from office of the sheriff of Osage county, this court approved an instruction which directed the jury that the burden rested upon the plaintiff to establish the guilt of the defendant by a clear preponderance of the evidence.
In view of the latter decision of this court, we are of the opinion that in such proceedings for the removal of an officer from office the degree of proof required need not rise above a clear preponderance of the evidence, and that in the giving of instructions the trial court should, as was done in the instant case, instruct the jury accordingly.
It is next contended that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict.
In the case of Garrett v. State, 113 Okla. 63, 238 P. 846, this court recognized that the permitting of prisoners to run at large during the term of their commitment constituted a ground for the removal of a sheriff from office.
In the case at bar McCasland was found guilty on two counts of permitting prisoners to run at large during the time they were committed to the county jail of his county.
Plaintiff in error contends that it is not shown that McCasland either knowingly or willfully allowed prisoners to run at large.
We think, under section 5898, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921, and section 1663, supra, that it was the business and the duty of the sheriff to know that prisoners committed to his keeping were during their commitment retained and imprisoned in the county jail. However, we think there is an abundance of evidence to show that the sheriff in this case knew that prisoners confined to his keeping were at large. With such information, we think that the jury was warranted in concluding that the defendant below was guilty of habitual and willful neglect of duty and willful maladministration in office under subdivisions (1) and (6) of section 2394, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes, 1921.
In Ex parte Clemmons, 27 Okla. Cr. 50, 225 P. 184, it is said:
"Where defendant is sentenced to prison and to pay a fine and costs, failure of the judgment to recite that he shall be confined for nonpayment does not entitle him to be released on serving the term of imprisonment named, in view of Comp. St. 1921, section 6332, providing that costs, together with the fine assessed, shall be enforced by imprisonment; such statutory provision automatically becoming a part of every criminal judgment imposing a fine or imprisonment or both."
The evidence adduced conclusively shows that the defendant below did not, in accordance *Page 107 with his duty, confine the prisoners Worley and Girdner for the duration of their sentences.
Criminal laws, or other laws, for that matter, cannot be enforced unless those charged with their execution perform their duty.
In Bradford v. Territory, 2 Okla. 228, 37 P. 1061, the territorial Supreme Court held:
"The acts done by a county officer to warrant his removal from office need not be such as would subject him to a criminal prosecution, but any acts done knowingly in violation of his statutory duties are sufficient to constitute such maladministration as will forfeit his right to said office."
We think there was sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in concluding, under counts 2 and 3, that the defendant McCasland was guilty as charged.
We doubt the sufficiency of the allegations in count 10, standing alone, to warrant the judgment rendered thereon. Count 10, as heretofore recited, charges that McCasland retained one Led Girdner as deputy sheriff in his office during the time that Girdner was under judgment and sentence. The mere act of retaining Girdner as a deputy sheriff after his conviction, while censurable, is not necessarily a sufficient ground for removal from office. It must be borne in mind that under count 2, the defendant was convicted for having permitted the said Girdner to run at large, and we think rightfully so, but under count 10, the mere fact that the sheriff permitted the deputy to retain his commission during the time he served his judgment and sentence would not in itself be sufficient ground for removal from office, for the mere fact that one is convicted of a misdemeanor does not disqualify him from holding office under our statute.
However, we affirm the judgment of the district court as to counts 2 and 3, and these in themselves are sufficient to warrant the plaintiff in error's removal from office.
BRANSON, C. J., and HARRISON, PHELPS, LESTER, HUNT, CLARK, and HEFNER, JJ., concur.
RILEY, J., dissents as to syllabus, parag. 3.