14 Colo. 71 | Colo. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
Prior to the adoption of the constitution, Central City was incorporated under a special charter. Ho abandonment of this charter, and re-incorporation under the general law relating to towns and cities, has since taken place. Therefore provisions of the original charter, and legitimate amendments thereto, are not unconstitutional upon the ground of special or local legislation; and, unless inconsistent with the constitution, they may stand. People v. Londoner, and citations, 13 Colo. 303.
This police judge or “ magistrate,” as he is termed in some parts of the charter, is now appointed by the council. By statute, he is given jurisdiction over actions for the violation of city ordinances. By ordinance, such jurisdiction is made exclusive, except in case of absence or disability. If it were a fact that the police judge is also clothed with the powers of a justice of the peace, the present inquiry would not be affected thereby. In the case at bar he was not acting, or attempting to act, as a justice of the peace. He proceeded as police judge or magistrate, exclusively, and discharged the duties peculiar to that office.
Appeals do not now lie, under the general law, from justices of the peace to the district court. The judgment of the court below was predicated upon the proposition that, for this reason, no appeal would lie from the police judge of Central to the district court. The special charter of Central City contains the following provision: “Appeals shall he allowed,from decisions in all cases arising under the provisions of this act, or any ordinance passed in pursuance thereto, to the district court; and every such appeal shall be granted in the same manner, and with like effect, as appeals are taken from and granted by justices of the peace under the laws of this territory.”
The foregoing statute, which was adopted in 186á, contains, in substance, two affirmative declarations: First, that appeals from decisions of the police judge, in cases
Substituting the word “state” for the word “territory ” in the provision, as we are authorized to do, the foregoing construction involves no inconsistency or difficulty. The appeal lies to the district court; but it is to be granted in the same manner, and prosecuted with the same effect, as appeals, under the present general laws, from justices of the peace to the county court.
We have not seen fit to notice the fact that, according to the record recital, the district court dismissed the cause itself, instead of the appeal from the police magistrate. In any view of the case, this ruling would, at the stage of the proceeding when taken, be erroneous. If the court
Reversed.