104 Mass. 224 | Mass. | 1870
The warrant upon which this defendant was arrested was served by an officer to whom it was not directed. It
Upon a motion to dismiss, the court can only look at such defects as are apparent of record. Defects not so apparent are more properly to be pleaded in abatement. It is true that the defects objected to in this case are so apparent, but it is very material to understand whether they are defects of form merely, or of substance, and upon this point the record gives no information. If the incapacity of the officer to serve this warrant consisted merely in the omission of the words appropriate to show that he was the proper officer to serve it, and that the case was one in which, with proper words of direction, he could lawfully have acted, the objection would be merely to the form of the process. It would present what may be described as a case of a good title, imperfectly stated; that is to say, a case in which he would have had a right to act, if the warrant had been made in conformity to the truth. There is a state of facts in which this warrant might have been directed to and served by a deputy state constable. If the defendant had been an alien passenger or a state pauper, he would have been a competent officer, under the St. of 1866, c. 292, § 2. We cannot know that such was not the true state of the facts in this case; and as a motion to dismiss is a matter of strict law, depending upon the record only, we do not feel at liberty to presume in favor of the motion either the existence or nonexistence of facts upon which the whole force of the motion depends, and upon which the record is silent. Upon a motion to dismiss “ for defect of form of process, the decision of the superior court is