44 S.W. 294 | Tex. Crim. App. | 1898
This is a proceeding on an original habeas corpus, granted and made returnable before this court. The petition alleges that applicant is illegally restrained by one J.C. Arnold, chief of police of the city of Dallas, by virtue of a certain judgment of commitment of the city court of Dallas. The agreed statement of facts contains a copy of the judgment and writ of commitment, the complaint on which the applicant was tried, together with a copy of the ordinance under which the prosecution and conviction were had. Said ordinance follows the State law on the subject, and makes it an offense against the city of Dallas for any person to keep or exhibit, for the purpose of gaming, any gaming table or bank of any kind or description whatever, or any table or bank used for gaming, etc.; and the punishment imposed is a fine of not less than $25, nor more than $100, and imprisonment in the city jail for not less than ten nor more than ninety days, which is the same in amount and degree as that provided under the State law or statute on the subject, which makes gaming an offense against the State laws. There was no information filed against defendant, but the complaint on which he was tried is as follows: "The State of Texas, County of Dallas, City of Dallas. Personally appeared before the undersigned authority, E.F. Gates, who, after being duly sworn, deposes and says that Bud Fagg, in the city of Dallas and State of Texas, on the 9th day of October, 1897, and before the filing of this complaint, did unlawfully keep and exhibit, for the purpose of gaming, a gaming table and bank, to wit, a faro bank, contrary to ordinances in such cases made and provided. [Signed] E.F. Gates." Sworn to and subscribed before T.L. Lawhon, city secretary. On the trial the relator Fagg was convicted, and his punishment assessed at a fine of $25 and ten days imprisonment in the city jail.
The contention of the applicant is that said conviction, being under an ordinance, and in the city court of Dallas, is illegal and void: (1) Because the statutes of the State make the exhibiting of a gaming table for *584 the purpose of gaming an offense against the State, and it is not competent for the Legislature to grant to a municipality authority, by ordinances, to supersede the State law on the subject; (2) because the city court of Dallas has no authority to try offenses against the State law; (3) and, granting the city court of Dallas has the power to try State cases, it must proceed as a State court. In the view we take of this question, it is not necessary to discuss the last two propositions, inasmuch as the offense alleged against applicant was prosecuted merely as a violation of the city ordinances; and we are accordingly confronted with two questions: (1) Does the charter of Dallas authorize the city council to pass an ordinance making said offense of keeping and exhibiting a gaming table for the purpose of gaming an offense against the city? (2) If the charter grants this power, did the Legislature have the power, under the Constitution and laws or this State, to confer upon the municipality of Dallas authority to make the exhibiting and keeping of a gaming table for the purpose of gaming an offense against the city?
We might observe here that section 24 of the new charter of the city of Dallas, granted by the Twenty-fifth Legislature, gives to the city court of Dallas jurisdiction as follows: "(1) To try, hear, determine, and punish all misdemeanors over which the Dallas city court now has jurisdiction. (2) To try, hear, determine, and punish all misdemeanors arising under the provisions of this charter; to have concurrent jurisdiction with the State courts over all misdemeanors against the State laws, committed within the city limits, except theft and those involving official misconduct, and to have exclusive jurisdiction over disorderly houses and female vagrants." But, as stated, it is not necessary to discuss this provision with reference to the jurisdiction of the city court of State offenses, prosecuted as such; and so it does not become necessary to discuss the bearing of the case of Harris County v. Stewart,
Appellant's contention is, that if it be conceded that the Legislature has the power, in accordance with the view taken by the Supreme Court in Harris County v. Stewart, supra, to confer jurisdiction upon a municipal court, and so create a State court, the Legislature has not done so in this instance. Entertaining the view, as we do, that a municipal court is not a State court, except in a limited sense (that is, a State court for municipal purposes only), we would expect to find, under the above caption, not a State court, as a part of the judicial system of the State, but a municipal court, having jurisdiction and cognizance of matters incidental to the corporation. In this regard we hold the views expressed in Blessing *585
v. City of Galveston,
However, as stated before, the question here presented to us is whether or not the charter of Dallas confers authority on the city council to make this an offense against the city, and whether or not the Legislature can confer this authority. The charter of the city of Dallas is a special charter, authorized under the Constitution for cities having more than 10,000 population; and by a number of sections, from 48 to 124, inclusive, said charter proposes to confer general powers on the city council to do certain things. Among a number of other things which the city is thus authorized to do, it appears to be authorized, by ordinance to make certain acts which are penal offenses under the State laws, offenses against the city. See secs. 83, 84, 86, 87, 89, 92, 93, and 103. All of the other enumerated sections appear to be regarding matters incidental to and growing out of the municipal corporation. Section 103, we presume, contains the provision under which it is contended the city council had authority to pass the ordinance against keeping and exhibiting gaming tables, under which the conviction was had in this case. Said section reads as follows: "To license, tax, and regulate billiard tables, pin alleys, and ball alleys; to suppress, restrain, and regulate and control disorderly houses, tippling shops and groceries, gambling and gaming houses, and games of every kind, lotteries and all fraudulent devices and practices, bawdy houses of prostitution, and to punish all keepers of said houses and exhibitors or players at said games and other things, with the same penalties, fine, and imprisonment as may be inflicted therefor by the statutes of the State of Texas." It would appear therefrom that the Legislature had conferred the power (if it was authorized to do so) on the city council to pass an ordinance making the offense created by the statutes of the State an offense against the State, to wit, the keeping and exhibiting of a gaming table and bank for the purpose of gaming, also an offense against the city; and the only question then is, did the Legislature have the constitutional right, under the Constitution and laws of this State, to confer this power? We would observe here that the general laws of the State (see articles 929-931, Code of Criminal Procedure 1895, inclusive) puts mayors and recorders of cities on the same plane, as to the administration of laws with reference to criminal prosecutions, as justices of the peace, and *587
vests them with the same power and jurisdiction, and authorizes municipal councils, by ordinances, to create acts which are made penal by State laws also offenses against the city, and to make all prosecutions and convictions under city ordinances good in bar of prosecutions for the same act under State laws, and vice versa. The act here complained of does not come within this category. It is such an offense as a justice of the peace has no jurisdiction to try, but the power to try and punish the same is vested by the Constitution and laws of the State in the county court (see secs. 16 and 19, art. 5, Const.; and see arts. 91 and 96, Code Crim. Proc. 1895); that is, imprisonment in the county jail being a part of the punishment under the State law for this offense, it can only be tried in the county court, same being a court of record. Some authorities hold that where the State law has acted upon a matter, and made the act an offense against the State, the Legislature can not afterwards delegate authority to municipal governments to create the same act an offense against the city. The State having once occupied the territory, the city is excluded from interfering with it. See Mayor, etc., of Savannah v. Hussey,
Of course, a great many matters are incidental to municipal corporations, and are not at all violative of State laws, and no question can arise as to ordinances covering said acts. A number of acts are petty offenses, and are covered by State laws, and would appear also to be peculiarly offenses against the municipal government, and incidental to such government, as well as offenses against the State. Our Penal Code defines a petty offense as "one which a justice of the peace or the mayor or other officer of a town or city may try and punish." Penal Code 1895, art. 57. *588
And this appears to be in consonance with the authorities defining a petty offense. Some of the cases hold that a petty offense can be made an offense against the municipal corporation by ordinance, and can be punished without violating the above provision of the Constitution with reference to prosecutions, while others hold the contrary. See note to State v. Robitshek (Minn.), 33 Law. Rep. Ann., 33 (same case, 61 N.W. Rep., 1023), and authorities there cited; City of Davenport v. Bird,
Now, the question which presents itself is: Does the fact that the municipal council of Dallas has, by ordinance, created the exhibiting and keeping of a gaming table for the purpose of gaming, an offense against the municipality, relieve it of being a prosecution? A "prosecution" is defined by our statute to be "the whole or any part of the procedure which the law provides for bringing offenders to justice." See article 26 of the Penal Code of 1895. "It is a criminal proceeding at the suit of the government." Tennessee v. Davis,
Relator discharged.
HURT, Presiding Judge, concurs in result, but dissents as to some of the propositions announced in the opinion.