457 N.E.2d 351 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1983
Lead Opinion
Defendant-appellee, Walter Scott, pleaded no contest in Cleveland Municipal Court to violations of R.C.
From this judgment the city of Cleveland appeals, assigning one error for our review:
"I. The trial court erred in holding that the mandatory fine enacted for keeping a place where intoxicating liquors are sold is unconstitutional."2
This assignment of error is raised in response to the trial court's apparent opinion that the legislature cannot mandate sentences. The state trial judges and magistrates do not have inherent or statutory power to set aside legislatively enacted sentences. See State, ex rel. Gordon, v. Zangerle (1940),
While we recognize that a reviewing court should not decide a constitutional question if a decision can be reached without reference to the question, we equally maintain that a trial court judge has even less authority to decide the constitutionality of a statute, especially when the issue is not raised by either party and the record is devoid of any legal basis for summarily declaring the statute unconstitutional. The trial court's decision in the instant case was rendered as follows:
"THE COURT: * * * Found guilty. $50.00 and costs.
"THE BAILIFF: Mandatory.
"THE COURT: I think that's unconstitutional, too. $50.00 and costs. Actually, I'll make it mandatory, and suspend the $50.00."
The Ohio Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of mandatory fines without possibility of suspension, Madjorous v.State (1925),
Although R.C.
"Whoever violates section
Furthermore, unlike the liquor law violations of R.C. Chapter 4301 et seq. which are classified as felonies and misdemeanors and penalized pursuant to R.C. Title 29 provisions, the violation in question, R.C.
Accordingly, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for imposition of the full minimum penalty mandated by R.C.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
PRYATEL, C.J., concurs.
DAY, J., dissents.
"* * * [I]f it be that the plain legislative command fixing a specific punishment for crime is subject to be permanently set aside by an implied judicial power upon considerations extraneous to the legality of the conviction, it would seem necessarily to follow that there could be likewise implied a discretionary authority to permanently refuse to try a criminal charge because of the conclusion that a particular act made criminal by law ought not to be treated as criminal. And thus it would come to pass that the possession by the judicial department of power to permanently refuse to enforce a law would result in the destruction of the conceded powers of the other departments and hence leave no law to be enforced." Ex Parte United States, at 42.
"At the time of sentencing and after sentencing, when a fine is imposed, the court may:
"(1) Suspend all or any portion of the fine, upon any conditions that the court imposes in the interests of justice and the correction and rehabilitation of the offender; * * *."
Dissenting Opinion
Respectfully, I dissent. In my view the appropriate disposition is affirmance. I would write the rationale for judgment this way — *360
The defendant-appellee, Walter Scott (defendant), plead no contest in Cleveland Municipal Court to violations of R.C.
From this judgment the city of Cleveland appeals, assigning one error:
"The trial court erred in suspending part of the mandatory fine imposed under Ohio Revised Code Sec.
For the reasons adduced, the judgment is affirmed.6
"Whoever violates section
This section does not expressly disallow suspension of sentence.7 Therefore, R.C.
"At the time of sentencing and after sentencing, when a fine is imposed, the court may:
"(1) Suspend all or any portion of the fine, upon any conditions that the court imposes in the interests of justice and the correction and rehabilitation of the offender; * * *."
Since the $50 suspension for violation of R.C.
"Whenever a person is found guilty of violating division (A) or (B) of section