Nichols v. Quinn
Nichols v. Quinn
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In the district court the plaintiff obtained a judgment against the defendant. In subsequent proceedings in aid of execution the court made a finding that in violation of an order prohibiting him from transferring any of his property the defendant had deposited in bank a sum of money in the name of his wife which was in fact his own; that he had on his person the sum of $5 in cash, and a gold watch, and in his possession a team of horses which belonged to him.
The first and second claims are, thát the court erred in making the order of .January 16, 1913, requiring defendant to pay over the money and deliver the property to the sheriff, and the refusal of the court to set this order aside. These might be disposed of summarily on the ground that nothing is involved in the appeal except the contempt proceedings. However, the objections raised to the proceedings are untenable. The order is not void for uncertainty. It was not necessary to recite the amount due on the judgment; that was a matter of record. Nor was it necessary for the order to state that the defendant was able to pay the j udgment. He was directed to turn over the property, or enough of it to satisfy the judgment. The order was sufficiently specific in describing the property which the defendant had in his possession and control. It is urged that the court had no power to make the order unless it should be first found that defendant was concealing the property. There is no statutory provision which requires
The third and fourth claims of error may be considered together. They are based on the refusal of the court to strike the accusation from the files and the overruling of a motion to quash the accusation. The ground urged in support of both contentions is the same; that the accusation was not verified. There is no express provision of the statute that the accusation shall be verified. The only verification which the statute in terms requires is that of the preliminary affidavit for the issuance of the attachment authorizing the arrest. This provision was complied with. The statute requires “a written accusation setting forth succinctly and clearly the facts alleged to constitute such contempt,” and the accused is then required to answer. (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 2486.)
In The State v. Forner, 75 Kan. 836, 89 Pac. 674, and The State v. Fishbach, 79 Kan. 679, 100 Pac. 656, the prosecutions were for indirect contempt in violating orders of the court under the prohibitory law. It was held that the statute does not contemplate that the accusation should have all the formality of an information. The cases cited by the defendant, The State v. Henthorn, 46 Kan. 613, 26 Pac. 937, and In re Smith, Petitioner, 52 Kan. 13, 33 Pac. 957, are not in point for the reason that in neither of them was there an affidavit or accusation of any kind filed. In the present case the preliminary affidavit authorized the issuance of an order for the arrest of the defendant, and when he was brought before the court and the accusation was filed the court was authorized to hear and determine the accusation upon the testimony as produced. (Gen Stat. 1909, §2486.)
The fifth contention, that the whole proceeding must fail because the original order which the defendant was
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.