61 Ala. 169 | Ala. | 1878
The constitution, article 6, section 18, ordains that “ If in any case, civil or criminal, pending in any circuit, chancery or city court in this State, the presiding judge or chancellor shall, for any legal cause, be incompetent to try, hear, or render judgment in such cause, the parties or their attorneys of record, if it be a civil case, or the-solicitor or other prosecuting officer, and the defendant or defendants, if it be a criminal case, may agree upon some-disinterested person practicing in the court and learned in the law, to act as special judge or chancellor, to sit as a court,
The Code of 1876, section 540, declares that “no judge of any court, chancellor, county commissioner, or justice, must sit in any cause or proceeding in which he is interested, or related to either party within the fourth degree of consanguinity or affinity, or in which he has been of counsel, without the consent of parties entered of record, or put in writing, if the court is not of record.” The parties to the present proceeding were the State of Alabama as complaining party, and Joe Gill as defendant. These were the only parties. It is manifest that the present case does not fall, within the letter of the statute. But, if we confine the rule-to the strict letter of section 540 of the Code, we thereby declare a judge may sit in judgment on a criminal, who took the life of his nearest relative. Nay, more; for offenses less than homicide, we declare that a judge may try an offender for a public offense against his own person or property.
"We hold that Judge Craig did not err in declining to preside in the trial of this case, and that he was incompetent to preside, in consequence of his relationship in the fourth degree to the deceased. This was a “ legal cause ” under our constitution which rendered him incompetent to try, hear, or render judgment, and presented a case, precisely within its provisions, for the appointment of a special judge.
Affirmed.