68 Ala. 296 | Ala. | 1880
The appellants were indicted for an assault with intent to murder. . On the trial it appeared, they were not guilty of that offence, but were guilty of an assault and battery, in which they used a stick and pistol. It was shown, that for the identical assault and battery, they had been convicted before a justice of the peace of the county, sentenced to pay a fine, and had paid it, before the finding of the present indictment. On this judgment of conviction the appellants relied as a bar to the present prosecution. The Circuit Court was of opinion, and so instructed the jury, that the justice of the peace was without jurisdiction of an assault, or an assault and battery, in which a stick or other weapon is used, and that the judgment of conviction was of consequence void, not operating to bar a prosecution by indictment in the circuit court.
The regularity of the mode by which this question was presented to the Circuit Court, was not matter of objection in that court, nor has it been questioned in this court. It was not considered in the Circuit Court — did not influence the decision of the court, which was directed alone to the jurisdiction of the justice, as if that question was regularly and solely presented. We will therefore pass only upon that question, without expressing approval or disapproval now of the manner in which it was raised in the Circuit Court.
The present constitution, following the constitutions of 1865, and of 1868, authorizes the General Assembly to confer on justices of the peace jurisdiction in cases of petit larceny, assault, assault and battery, affray, unlawful assemblies, vagrancy, and other misdemeanors. All the offences enumerated are minor, subjected at common law and under pre-existing statutes to punishments of the least severity. It was of such offences only, because of their grade, the makers of the con
There is no error in the rulings of the Circuit Court of prejudice to the appellants.
Affirmed.