82 W. Va. 201 | W. Va. | 1918
James Watson who is in the custody of the sheriff and jailer of McDowell County, under a jail sentence of sixty days, imposed by the mayor of the Town of Welch, acting as a justice of the peace ex officio of said county, for the offense of idleness or vagrancy, created by provisions of chapter 12 of the Acts of the Second Extraordinary Session of the legislature of 1917, seeks liberation from such custody by a writ of ¡habeas corpus, on the ground of alleged lack of jurisdiction in the mayor of the town of Welch, to impose the sentence under which he is confined, the offense having been committed and the arrest made outside of the corporate limits of .the Town of Welch, but in McDowell County in which said town is situated.
The mayor’s jurisdiction, if any, is conferred by see. 39 of eh; 47 of the Code, and the first inquiry raised is the inter
Under organic laws somewhat similar to provisions found in our Constitution, courts of last resort in Mississippi, North Carolina, Texas and AViseonsin have held statutes purporting to vest the jurisdiction and powers of justices of the peace in mayors of towns, unconstitutional and void. Haggie v. Stone, (Miss.) 12 So. 253; Town of Edenton v. Wool, 65 N. C. 379; Leech v. State (Tex.), 36 S. W. 471; Ex parte Knox, (Tex.) 39 S. W. 670; Attorney General v. McDonald, 3 Wis. 703. The two Texas cases cited were decided by the Criminal Court of Appeals of that state. A decision by the Supreme Court of Texas, holding the exact opposite, is found in May v. Finley, 91 Tex. 352. In that
Our Constitution, like those of most, if not all, of those of the other states, provides, eo nomine, in Art. 8, for á court of last resort, certain courts of original and general jurisdiction and justices of the peace as courts of limited jurisdiction, for the administration of justice throughout the state. Section 19 of that article continues the existence of the Municipal Court of Wheeling, until otherwise provided by law, and expressly vests power and authority in the legislature to establish courts of limited jurisdiction within any county, incorporated city, town or Milage, with the right of appeal to the Circuit Court, subject to such limitations as may be provided by law, and continues the existence of all courts of limited jurisdiction established in any county, incorporated city, town or village, prior to the adoption of the Constitution, until otherwise provided by law. At the date of the adoption of the Constitution, every mayor of a city, town or village, in the state was ex officio a justice of the peace. Code, 1868, ch. 47, sec. 39. The powers of the office of justice of the peace had been annexed to the office of mayor, as far back as 1849, at least. Code of 1860, ch. 48, sec. 6; Code, 1849, ch. 48, sec. 6. Mayors were no doubt magistrates in Virginia, at the early date of 1796, for an act of the General Assembly, then passed, provided as follows: “That the magistrates of any corporate town shall have the same power to examine privily, and take the acknowledgment of a feme covert to a conveyance, and to certify the same, as is by law given to justices of peace of a county.” 'Revised Code, 1819, ch. 261, sec. 2. Mayors of towns, then, at the date of the adoption
These conclusions clearly deny the relief sought and the petitioner will be remanded to the custody of the jailer of McDowell County.
Petitioner remanded.