Howland v. State

151 Tenn. 47 | Tenn. | 1924

Mr. Justice Cook

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff in error was adjudged guilty of voluntary manslaughter and committed to the vocational school *49for girls for a term of five years. She appealed and has assigned as error (1) that the evidence preponderates against the verdict; (2) that she is under sixteen years of age.and not subject to the jurisdiction of the criminal court.

Witnesses for the State testify to facts which show a deliberate assault with a knife, under circumstances sufficient to sustain a charge of murder in the second degree; the accused presents facts which would authorize a verdict of voluntary manslaughter. The evidence sustains the verdict. The other assignments of error challenge the jurisdiction of the court.

By chapter 58 of the Acts of 1911, the legislature established the juvenile court, and conferred upon it jurisdiction over all dependent and delinquent children. Delinquent children includes, among others, any child under sixteen years of age who has violated the law. The act confers exclusive jurisdiction upon the juvenile court in all cases against persons under sixteen years of age charged with a crime or misdemeanor other than rape or murder. It “expressly provides that when a judge of a juvenile court shall conclude that a child brought before him is probably guilty of murder in the first degree, murder in the second degree, or of rape, that the juvenile court shall at once turn said child over to the authorities of the county to be proceeded against according to the course of the criminal law. In other words, a -juvenile court has no jurisdiction when the judge of that court is of opinion that the child brought before him is probably guilty of one of the crimes mentioned.” Juvenile Court of Shelby County v. State ex *50rel., 139 Tenn., 557, 201 S. W., 773, Ann. Cas., 1918D, 752.

In Templeton v. State, 146 Tenn., 272, 240 S. W., 789, the court said:

“Section 2 of the act, which gives the county judge or chairman of the county court exclusive jurisdiction of all cases coming within the terms of this chapter, does not apply to cases of rape and murder, as such cases are not within the terms of the act at all. This being true, the act does not prohibit the arresting of a child under sixteen years old upon a criminal warrant by a justice of the peace, or his indictment by a grand jury and his trial in the circuit court of the offenses of rape and murder. The provision in the act which authorizes and requires the juvenile court to remand the child when it shall appear that there is probable cause to believe it guilty of the crime of rape or murder, to dismiss the cause and remand the child to the sheriff of the county to be dealt with, is intended only to facilitate the jurisdiction of the criminal court over such offenses where the child has been arrested under the provisions of the act. This provision of the act strengthens the construction that the circuit court alone has jurisdiction of offenses of rape and murder by juveniles, and it in no way repeals or modifies the general provision of the criminal law with respect to offenses of this- character.”

The record does not show that the accused was carried before the juvenile court, as provided in section 10 of chapter 58, Acts of 1911, and after a preliminary examination committed to the jurisdiction of the criminal court to answer the charge of murder as provided in section 9 of the Act. Cases of murder and rape are not *51within the terms of the act, and the preliminary examination by the juvenile conrt was not required as a means of conferring jurisdiction upon the criminal court. Templeton v. State, supra.

It is insisted by plaintiff in error that the criminal court of Hamilton county could not exercise jurisdiction because she was under sixteen years of age, and not guilty of any degree of murder; and that the trial judge erroneously dismissed the plea in abatement challenging jurisdiction upon this ground. The circuit and criminal courts possessed superior original jurisdiction over all indictable offenses when the juvenile court law was passed. Their jurisdiction was exclusive in all cases until this act conferred jurisdiction upon the juvenile court over delinquent children — that is persons under sixteen years of age charged with any other crime but rape and murder. A plea in abatement would be good in cases when the indictment charged one under sixteen years of age with a crime other than rape or murder. After verdict, if it appeared from the face of the record that the accused under sixteen years of age was indicted and convicted for a crime beyond the jurisdiction of the circuit of criminal court, a motion in arrest of judgment would lie. Sams v. State, 133 Tenn., 188, 180 S. W.,, 173.

But where the grand jury presented an indictment for murder against one under sixteen years of age, as was done in this case, the jurisdiction of the criminal court over the offense of murder being exclusive, that court would not thereafter lose its jurisdiction by a verdict assessing a degree of homicide below murder. 16 C. J., 181, pars. 246, 247.

*52This follows as a consequence of our statutes. Section 7188, Shannon’s Code, requires the trial judge to charge the jury upon all included offenses. Sections 7085 and 7195, provide that upon indictment for any offense admitting of different degrees the defendant may he convicted of the offense charged or any degree below the offense charged. It was incumbent upon the criminal court to impanel a jury and put the accused to trial upon the indictment for murder to ascertain her guilt or. innocence.

The jury, not the judge, determines the degree of homicide, and, until after verdict, the court could not know what degree the jury, in the exercise of their discretion, might find. The judge could not review the discretion thus exercised by the jury, but must write a judgment upon the verdict as'reported. After the accused was tried upon the indictment, which included all the degrees of homicide, having been once in jeopardy, jurisdiction could not then be relinquished and the cause committed to the juvenile court. Tomasson v. State, 112 Tenn. (4 Cates), 596, 79 S. W., 802; Armstrong v. State, 1 Cold. (Tenn.), 341; McGinnis v. State, 9 Humph. (Tenn.), 54, 49 Am. Dec., 697.

Affirmed.

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