126 Mass. 235 | Mass. | 1879
Since the St. of 1877, c. 211, took effect, justices of the peace have had no authority to receive complaints in criminal cases, unless commissioned as trial justices, or holding the office of clerk or assistant clerk of a municipal, district, or police court.
The complaints in the cases at bar were received by a justice of the peace, to whom they were addressed, and whose certificate does not show that he held any office which authorized him to receive them. On the face of the papers, therefore, nothing appears giving jurisdiction to any magistrate to issue-warrants for the arrest of the persons charged in the complaints. The defendants, after verdict, moved in arrest of judgment for this cause. We are of opinion that judgment should have been arrested.
Nothing is presumed in favor of the jurisdiction of inferior magistrates. Their warrants for the arrest of persons are void, unless the authority to issue them appears on the face of the instruments. Howard v. Gosset, 10 Q. B. 359, 452. 1 Smith
Evidence aliunde that the person assuming authority in the premises had such authority by virtue of an official character which the papers did not disclose, was incompetent. Otherwise it would be open to show.that warrants, not purporting to be issued by any magistrate, were valid, because the person whose name was signed to them held such office as would have authorized him to issue them as the justice of some court. That this could be done would hardly be contended; but it is in substance what is contended for here. The complaint was not properly received and sworn to because received by a justice of the peace, any more than if received by and sworn to before a private citizen; and evidence that the justice of the peace was also the holder of another office not indicated by the papers, is of precisely the same kind, and open to precisely the same objection, as evidence that the person who certified as a private citizen was a competent magistrate.
We see no force in the argument that, because the record is certified by Charles H. Sanford as clerk of the District Court, the court would be bound to take judicial notice of the fact that the person who received the complaint was the clerk of the District Court, and therefore authorized to receive the complaint. The case of Commonwealth v. Desmond, 103 Mass. 445, cited by the government on this point, decides that the court is bound judicially to take notice not only of the existence of the Munici pal Court of the city of Boston in the county of Suffolk, but also of its local situation and jurisdiction in a city and county within the limits of the Commonwealth. This is very different from the proposition that the certification of the record of the District Court, by Charles H. Sanford as clerk, binds the court judicially to take notice of the fact that he is the Sanford who received the complaint, and to hold, therefore, that the complaint gave jurisdiction to issue a warrant, though on its face received by and sworn to before a person not authorized to receive it nor to administer the oath to the complainant.
The defect in the papers is not formal merely, but goes to the jurisdiction of the court, within the St. of 1864, c. 250, §§ 2, 3, there being no authority in any magistrate or inferior court to
Exceptions sustained.
“ Section 1. No justice of the peace, not designated and commissioned as a trial justice, shall hereafter have or exercise any power, authority or jurisdiction to try civil cases, or receive complaints, or issue warrants : provided, however, that any justice of the peace who shall also be a clerk or assistant clerk of any municipal, district or police court, may receive complaints and issue warrants, returnable before some trial justice, police, district or municipal court, having jurisdiction of the examination of the person changed with the offence.”