42 S.C. 184 | S.C. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The facts out of which this case arose, are set forth in the order of the presiding j ndge, which is as follows: “This ease was heard and defendant convicted, and fined in the police court of the city of Charleston, for violating a city ordinance with reference to disorderly houses. A notice of appeal was served in five days upon the city recorder, who is the presiding officer and judge of the said court, and a similar notice was served upon the corporation counsel. No report having been filed in this court by the recorder, a rule was taken out by defendant’s attorneys, requiring the recorder to show cause why the said return should not be compelled by attachment. In response to this rule, the corporation counsel appeared before me and moved to dismiss the rule upon the ground that there is no appeal provided by law from the police court of the city of Charleston. After hearing full argument of counsel for the defendant, as well as the corporation counsel, I am of opinion that the police court of the city of Charleston, established many years ago, both by State statute and city ordinance, and recognized from time to time since by the statutes of the State, is a different court from a trial justice court, or from the court contemplated in the cases of Beaufort v. Ohlandt, and Lexington v. Wise, 24 S. C. It is such a court as is referred to in Ex parte Schmidt, 24 S. C.; and there being-no appeal provided by law from that court: It is ordered, That the motion to discharge the rule to show cause, above referred to, be granted, and that the rule be dismissed.”
From this order the defendant appealed on the following grounds: I. Because his honor erred in deciding that there was no appeal from the judgment and sentence of the recorder of Charleston while presiding at the police court. II. Because his honor erred in deciding that a person carried before the police court of Charleston County, charged with a violation of a city ordinance, has no right to have the case transferred to the city court or a trial justice for trial by jury, and has no right to appeal from the judgment of said court. III. Because the defendant has the right of appeal from any sentence from any court in South Carolina, affecting her rights, and his honor
Sec. 1 of art. IN. of the Constitution provides that: “The the judicial power of this State shall be vested in a Supreme Coux-t, in two Circuit Courts, to wit: a Court of Common Pleas, having civil jurisdiction, and a Court of General Sessions, with criminal jurisdiction only, in Probate Courts, and injustices of the peace. The General Assembly may also establish such municipal and other infex'ior courts as maybe deemed necessary.”
In the case of City Council v. Ashley Phosphate Co., 33 S. C., 25, it is decided that-the City Court of Charleston was created under that provision of the Constitution empowering the General Assembly to “establish such municipal and other inferior courts as may be deemed necessary.” The court uses the following language: “So that we conclude that the creation of the City Court of Charleston was authorized by that provision of the Constitution empowering the General Assembly to create municipal and other inferior courts.”
The police court owes its creation to the same provision of the Constitution. If we strike out the words: “he shall be invested * * * with all the powers, authority, and jurisdiction of a trial justice in this State in criminal matters and cases,” in section 1 of the act defining the jurisdiction of the police court of Charleston, the jurisdiction of that court will be left in a very uncertain and indefinite state, with no well defined limits. Not only is the act of 1878, supra, dependent upon these words to define the jurisdiction of the police court, but the act of 1836, when the mayor was the presiding officer of said cou rt, was likewise dependent upon the following provision so as to define the jurisdiction of said court, to wit: “And the
Also, “Now, if the act of 1874 should be regarded as conferring upon the intendant of the town of Beaufort all the powers of a trial justice, and in additiou thereto, constituting the intendant an independent municipal court for the trial of
It is the judgment of this court, that the order appealed from be reversed, and that the case be remanded to the Court of General Sessions for Charleston County for such further proceedings as may be necessary to carry out the views herein announced.