1 Iowa 444 | Iowa | 1855
By section 28 of the charter of the city of Dubuque, approved February 24,184-9, any justice of the peace within the city has full power and authority, and it is made .their respective duties, at such times as complaint and application shall be made before either of them, to issue all needful process for the apprehension of offenders against any of the by-laws, ordinances, or regulations of said city, and to hold a. court for the trial of such offences. They have, also, power to fine and imprison for the violation of such by-laws, rules, and regulations. And by section 24, all trials for such violations are required tó be in a summary manner, but no person is to be deprived of his liberty, or be fined in a sum greater than twenty dollars, unless convicted by a jury of six citizens of said city.
The city now claims that from such convictions, or judgments, the defendant cannot appeal; but if the power of review is given in any way, it is only by certiorari — -first, because no appeal is given by the express words of the charter; second, because the proceeding is summary, or in a course different from the common law, before a new jurisdiction created by statute.
If this is a new jurisdiction, created by statute, and the court exercising it proceeds in a summary manner, or in a course different from the common law, then it is undoubtedly true that, upon general principles, certiorari, and not appeal, furnishes the proper remedy. Rahlan v. Common
We, therefore, conclude, that the court below did not err in overruling tbe motion to dismiss tbe appeal. In so bold-ing, however, we do not wish to be understood as deciding that the appieal, as such, was taken regularly, or in tbe manner required by law. Upon this subject we give no opinion.
It appears that, after tbe overruling of tbe motion to dismiss tbe appeal, a trial was bad, and defendant fined ten dollars. He now claims, on his part, that tbe court erred in bolding that tbe prosecution could be maintained under tbe ordinance above named, contending that it was alone punishable under an ordinance of May 10, 1852. We have examined tbe two ordinances, and tbinlc tbe court held correctly in overruling this objection. The offence charged comes clearly within tbe provisions of tbe ordinance of July 17, 1854. It may also be prohibited by tbe language of the prior ordinance, wbicb appeal’s to be unrepealcd, but it does not therefore follow, that it may not be punished under tbe last ordinance.
■Judgment affirmed.