84 S.E. 690 | N.C. | 1915
At common law, the power of courts of record of general jurisdiction to punish for contempt and, in certain instances, by summary procedure, has existed time out of mind; as said by Judge Blackstone, "as far as the annals of the law extend."
It is a power inherent in any court engaged in administering justice as a governmental function, and, in the higher courts, established and existent under constitutional provision and in matters essential to the proper and efficient exercise of their jurisdiction, it may not be destroyed or sensibly impaired by legislative enactment. Ex Parte McCown,
While it is understood with us that, in mere matters of procedure and in courts below the Supreme Court which comes under the influence of a special constitutional provision, the question presented may be to some extent regulated by legislation, it is also held that, both as to direct and constructive contempts, the trial is properly had by the court without the intervention of the jury, and usually by the court against which the offense has been committed. In re Deaton, supra; Baker v. Cordon,
The power in question is conferred to enable a court to command respect and obedience, and it would go far to weaken and, in case of direct contempt, would well-nigh destroy it if the occasion of its present exercise would have to be referred for decision to some other tribunal or agency.
In reference to this procedure by contempt, it was very generally if not universally recognized as the proper method of maintaining order in the courts and of enforcing obedience to their decrees and mandates, and in case of constructive contempt, often arising from false and defamatory publications concerning court trials and proceedings, (421) the power was not infrequently exercised, and this, in earlier times, whether these trials were pending or had terminated. This last position has, however, been very much modified, and owing in a great measure to a different and, to our minds, a truer concept of the nature and extent of this power, and in part, no doubt, to the unusual method of procedure which, in its practical application, usually required that a judge, keenly and at times vitally interested in the result, should consider and determine the questions involved, many of the courts of this country have long held it for law that the right to punish for constructive contempt by reason of false and defamatory publications concerning proceedings in court should be properly confined to such publications about a trial or proceedings still pending; that it was only because and when such publications were calculated to obstruct or unduly interfere with the due administration of justice that such a power could be properly exercised, and that it was only when and to the extent that the judge was presently engaged in dispensing the State's justice that he could be considered as embodying in himself the majesty of the State's law and authorizing him to enforce obedience and respect to the courts and to his official acts; but, after a court had ended and a trial had finally terminated, if false, defamatory, or scurrilous publications were made concerning his official or personal conduct, this became a personal matter, and he must seek redress by the ordinary methods and bring his cause before an impartial tribunal.
In this position, the doctrine of contempt by "scandalizing the court," a term used, I believe, by Lord Hardwicke, and without reference to its effect or tendency to obstruct or interfere with the administration of justice, has no place, and the same will be found approved, substantially as stated, in many well considered decisions of the State courts of this country, as, In re Hart,
True, in the next year, this power was exerted in England in the case ofReg. v. Gray, 2 L. R., Q. B. Div., 1900, p. 36, though it may be noted that, in delivering judgment, Lord Russell referred to the fact that the article in question, containing scurrilous abuse of the judge and in reference to his conduct as judge while sitting under the Queen's commission, "was published in a newspaper and circulated in the town where he was still holding court."
There are courts in this country, of eminent ability and learning, which still adhere to the earlier position, a notable case being that of S. exinf. Crow, Atty.-Gen., v. Shepherd,
This statute, appearing in Revisal 1905, ch. 17, sec. 939 et seq., has been several times approved in its principal features by decisions of this Court, beginning with Ex Parte Schenck,
Having reference to the history of this statute, the context and the language employed, it was clearly the purpose and meaning of the act to restrict the power of the court, in this last respect, to the publication of grossly inaccurate reports about a trial or other matter still pending, and, this being in our view the proper and only permissible occasion for the exercise of such a power in reference to these publications, we are of opinion that the provision of the statute should, in this respect, be upheld as written, and the power to punish summarily for defamatory reports and criticisms, about a matter that is past and ended, no longer exists.
It may be that if a grossly indecent or scurrilous publication about a judge in reference to his official conduct should be made and circulated in the community where he was presently holding court, and about his rulings in such court, conditions might be created where the exercise of the power could be upheld as essential to the due and orderly administration of public justice (a case presented in Reg. v. Gray, supra), (424) but no such conditions appear in this record, the facts showing that the publications complained of were made after the court had adjourned, and, so far as appears, after any and all matters referred to concerning the official conduct of the judge had terminated. Under the principles stated, therefore, the respondents may not be dealt with by process of contempt, but, however reprehensible their conduct may have been, redress must be sought before another tribunal and by ordinary methods of procedure.
The motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction was properly overruled. The court finds as a fact that copies of the publication were circulated in the county of Northampton, where the trial was held, and, if it were otherwise, except in cases to enforce obedience to an order or a decree in a suit pending, this, regarded as an independent or collateral matter, is held to be a question of venue. Herring v. Pugh,
For the reasons heretofore stated, the judgment of the lower court must be reversed and judgment entered that defendants go without day.
Reversed.
Cited: S. v. Little,