29 So. 2d 162 | La. | 1946
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *1082 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *1083 This is a proceeding by certiorari, prohibition and mandamus to cancel a peace bond of $10,000.
The order requiring the relator to furnish the bond was granted by the judge of the district court on August 8, 1946, on the affidavit of four persons who appeared before him and declared under oath that they had just cause to apprehend that a breach of the peace was intended by Hansen D. Bordelon, who is the relator in this proceeding, and that unless the judge would order him to give bond to keep the peace he would, according to their fears, do them bodily harm.
The judge acted under authority of Section 35 of Article VII of the Constitution declaring that district judges shall have jurisdiction to require bonds to keep the *1084
peace, and under authority of Article
The order of the judge directing the sheriff to arrest Bordelon and to require him to give the peace bond of $10,000 for a period of 12 months, or to commit him to jail if he should refuse to give the bond, was signed by the judge without first ordering Bordelon to be brought before the judge. But, on the next morning, August 9th, Bordelon informed his attorney of his having been ordered to furnish the peace bond, and the attorney, according to a statement made in his brief, interviewed the *1085
judge and advised him of a ruling made by an assistant attorney general in 1938 to the effect that judges of the district courts had not jurisdiction to require peace bonds. It is admitted also in the relator's brief that the judge thereupon stated that he would look into the question of jurisdiction and would instruct the sheriff to withhold enforcement of the order requiring the peace bond until August 12th. It was agreed then by and between the judge and Bordelon's attorney that the latter would appear before the judge with Bordelon on August 12th and present his plea. On that date Bordelon and his attorney appeared in the court room, before the judge, and filed an exception to the jurisdiction of the judge to require peace bonds. The attorney then cited in support of his exception the case of State ex rel. Caladera v. Restiva,
In the brief filed in this court the attorneys for the relator insist that his exception to the jurisdiction of the judge of the district court was well founded, according *1087
to the decision rendered in State ex rel. Caladera v. Restiva,
We agree with the judge of the district court that the exception to his jurisdiction was not well founded. The opinion rendered by the assistant attorney general on June 9, 1938, was based upon the decision that had been rendered in State ex rel. Caladera v. Restiva,
"Every judge shall have the power in all cases in which it shall appear to him by the oath of a credible person that a breach of the peace has been committed, or that there is just cause to apprehend that a breach of the peace is intended, to cause the person charged with such breach or with such intention to be brought before him, and to direct that such person give such security as to the judge may seem reasonable to keep the peace of the state, and to answer to the offense if any has been committed; and in case of refusal to give such security he shall commit such person to the custody of the sheriff, who shall thereupon imprison such person until he shall enter into such security as has been ordered before the same or some other judge; provided that in no peace bond case shall any fees or costs be taxable either against the parish, the complainant or the person placed under peace bond."
The relator in this case sets up several alternative complaints, to be considered only in the event of our having affirmed the overruling of his exception to the jurisdiction of the judge of the district court.
The first alternative complaint is that the judge should have ordered Bordelon to appear before him before ordering him to furnish the peace bond. That complaint would be well founded but for the fact that the judge did have Bordelon brought before him and did in fact give him an opportunity to be heard before the judge required him to furnish the peace *1089 bond. In his return or answer to the rule issued by this court the judge states that when he ordered the bond to be furnished he directed the sheriff to bring Bordelon before him to answer to the complaint, before arresting him, "in order that he might be given a hearing"; and the judge adds that he directed the sheriff to bring any witnesses whom Bordelon might see fit to produce. The judge's statement in that respect is borne out by the fact that Bordelon was not required to sign the bond and in fact did not sign it until he had appeared before the judge and was given an opportunity to be heard, on August 12, 1946.
The next alternative complaint of the relator is that he was not confronted with the witnesses against him and did not have the benefit of a cross-examination of them. He admits, however, in his brief filed in this court, that the witnesses were in court at the time of his appearing before the judge on August 12, 1946; we assume that he refers to the four witnesses who had signed the affidavit against him. According to the method of procedure outlined in Article
The next alternative complaint of the relator is that the amount of the bond, $10,000, is excessive. The answer to that is that no such complaint was made to the judge of the district court after he had fixed the bond. Perhaps the principal reason why there was no complaint in that respect is that Bordelon had no difficulty or delay in the matter of furnishing the *1091 bond. He declares in his brief that his reason for not asking for a reduction of the amount of the bond was that such a request on his part would have constituted a waiver of his exception to the jurisdiction of the judge to require him to furnish a peace bond. Our opinion is that he might have made an alternative request of the judge to reduce the bond, without waiving his exception to the jurisdiction of the judge to require a peace bond. In fact, if the plea that the district judges throughout the state had not jurisdiction to require peace bonds had been well founded, the plea would have had reference to their jurisdiction ratione materiae, and could not have been waived by an alternative request for a reduction of the bond.
The relator complains finally that the conditions of the order for the bond are not limited to a breach of the peace in so far as the parties making the affidavit are concerned, but is a general order requiring the relator to keep the peace as to any and all persons for a period of 12 months. The order signed by the judge and directed to the sheriff did not state the conditions of the bond but merely directed the sheriff to require Bordelon to give security to keep the peace for a period of 12 months, in the sum of $10,000. The conditions stated in the bond itself are that Bordelon shall keep the peace and shall not do harm, contrary to law, to any person whomsoever and especially shall not do harm to or molest the parties named in the affidavit, for the period of 12 months. So far as these conditions *1092
go beyond the requirements of the statute, Article
"It is well settled that the conditions or obligations of a bond given under compulsion of a statute cannot be made more onerous than the statute requires. Any such stipulation beyond the requirements of the statute is null; and it has been so decided directly in reference to a peace bond."
The relief prayed for by the relator is denied.
FOURNET, J., concurs in the decree.