114 Mo. App. 567 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
Defendant was arrested under a warrant issued from the police court of the city of Kirksville, a city of the third class, upon the verified complaint of the prosecuting witness, which charged him with the violation of an ordinance. He was tried before a jury, convicted, and fined, and in due time appealed to the circuit court where he filed a plea in abatement, attacking the jurisdiction of the court over the action upon the ground that the ordinance regulating the procedure in such cases provides that “defendant shall be entitled to a trial by jury, as in prosecutions before justices of the peace, and all trials before the recorder shall_be conducted in like manner as cases before the justice of the peace,” and, as no information signed by the city attorney was filed, the police court was without authority to proceed with the trial and lost jurisdiction over defendant. After hearing evidence introduced in support of the plea,, the court sustained it and discharged the defendant. From the judgment, the plaintiff city appealed.
It appears to be conceded that in the absence of municipal legislation to the contrary a defendant charged with the breach of an ordinance may, under the statutes applying to cities of the third class, be proceeded against upon the filing of a sworn complaint of any person, but it is insisted that the practice prescribed by statute regulating the procedure in misdemeanor cases before justices of the peace, which requires the filing of an information signed and verified by the prosecuting attorney before the accused may be put upon trial, was by the ordinance pleaded in abatement adopted as the rule of procedure in cases of a quasi-criminal nature arising in the police court. The case of City of Kansas v. O’Connor, 36 Mo. App. 594, is relied upon as authority
We have examined the points presented by defendant in support of his claim that the appeal should be dismissed and find them to be without merit. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.