24 Kan. 211 | Kan. | 1880
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a prosecution in the name of the city of Solomon, a city of the third class, against J ames Hughes, for the violation of a certain city ordinance. The action was commenced before the police judge of said city, before whom the defendant was tried, convicted and sentenced. The defendant then appealed to the district court, where he was again tried, convicted and sentenced; and he now appeals to this court.
About the only question involved in the case is, whether the district court could, in such an action as this, take judicial notice of the incorporation of said city and of its ordinances. We suppose that it will be admitted that the police judge, who was an officer of said city, and the one before whom the case was originally prosecuted, could not only take judicial notice of the incorporation of his own city and of the existence and substance of its ordinances, but that it was his imperative duty to do so. And when the case was taken on appeal from the police judge to the district court, we think it was not only within the power, but it was also the duty of the district court to try the case in the same manner that it should have been tried before the police judge. The district court was, in fact, substituted for the time being for the police judge; and whatever the police judge could have taken judicial notice of while the case was in his court, the district court could and should take judicial notice of after the removal of the case to the district court; and as there was no necessity to introduce evidence in the police judge’s court to show the incorporation of the city of Solomon, or the existence of its ordinances, we think there was no necessity to introduce such evidence in the district court. And what did not need to be proved, did not need to be alleged.
The defendant claims that the ordinance under which he
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.