Baker v. Caudill
Baker v. Caudill
Opinion of the Court
Tom Baker appeals from an order denying him release from jail on a writ of habeas corpus. He was convicted in the police court of Hazard upon a warrant of arrest which charged that “Tom Baker, a licensee, has committed the offense of serving and permitting beer to be served to minors Victor Holliday aiid Travis Combs, on or about the 13 day of Novi 1952, in the town of Hazard, against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.” Baker was again convicted on February 17, 1953, on his appeal to the Perry Circuit Court and his punishment fixed at six months in jail and a $200 fine. No appeal was taken to this court, although Baker executed a supersedeas bond. Later, he paid the $200 fine, moved to Richmond and was not arrested to serve the jail sentence until January 15, 1954. It is from that imprisonment that Baker seeks release.
The ground upon which habeas corpus was claimed before the circuit judge was, in substance, that Baker had performed his part of an agreement with the prosecuting officers, which was known to the circuit judge, that if he would pay the fine and submit law and facts to the court on another similar charge, he would be relieved of the jail sentence, and upon this assurance he did not perfect an appeal. Such agreement was explicitly denied by all the officials. However, in this court that ground has been reduced to a mournful contention that he was misled and mistreated by the officers reneging on their promise. His argument before us is that the warrant upon which he was tried is void. The point is that charging the accused merely as a “licensee” with “serving beer to minors” is no legal accusation. It is insisted that this embraces any individual possessing a license to conduct any business or to practice any profession although having no relation to alcoholic beverages, such as a merchant or lawyer, whereas the statute declares only that “no retail licensee shall sell, give away or deliver any alcoholic beverage” to a minor, KRS 244.080, and that there is no law against any other kind of licensee doing so. It is further submitted that the statute does not condemn “serving beer.”
Where the accused offender is brought before a court having jurisdiction of final disposition of the charge, a warrant is a formal accusation upon which a trial may be had. It performs the same office that an indictment does in a superior court. Our. Criminal Code of Practice, Sec. 27, requires only that a warrant shall in general terms name or describe the offense charged to have been committed.
In determining the sufficiency of a warrant, great latitude of construction will be indulged. It is not necessary that the warrant should charge the offense with the fullness, particularity or technical accuracy required of an indictment although the essentials must be stated. Patrick v. Commonwealth, 199 Ky. 83, 250 S.W. 507; Hines v. Commonwealth, 308 Ky. 859, 215 S.W.2d 1014. A warrant is sufficient if it furnishes the accused with such a description of the charge as will enable him to prepare his defense and protect himself from being put in further jeopardy and is sufficient to support a judgment of conviction if the facts alleged, shall be proven. Commonwealth v. Melvin, Ky., 256 S.W.2d 513. Of course, if the warrant states no criminal offense, it and the proceedings based upon it are void. In Wade v. Com
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.