11 S.E. 244 | N.C. | 1890
The defendants asked the Court to reverse the facts found by the Mayor, or to grant the defendants a trial by jury. The defendants contended that they ought to have the right to have the facts reviewed by the Court.
The judgment of the Mayor, appealed from, is as follows: "This cause coming on to be heard, and after hearing the defendants' statement in regard thereto, it is adjudged by the Court that the said I. M. Deaton and T. M. Hall wilfully and designedly published said grossly inaccurate statement in the Troy Times for the purpose of bringing this *76 Court into contempt and ridicule, and that they further contemptuously refuse to obey the order of this Court in refusing to appear before said Court.
"It is therefore adjudged that the said I. M. Deaton and T. M. Hall are guilty of a contempt of this Court, and it is ordered and (61) adjudged that said I. M. Deaton and T. M. Hall pay each a fine of forty dollars and the costs of this proceeding, and, in default thereof, that they be committed to the common jail for the county of Montgomery for thirty days, and until they be discharged according to law."
The notice to show cause appears not to have been based upon affidavit, but to have been issued by the Mayor, ex mero motu.
The appeal coming on to be heard in the Superior Court, his Honor, being of opinion that he could not review the facts found by the Mayor, confirmed the judgment, and gave judgment against the defendants.
The defendants excepted and appealed.
Alternative judgments are not allowable in either civil or criminal cases. State v. Perkins,
The power to punish for a contempt committed in the presence of the Court, or near enough to impede its business, is essential to the existence of every Court. In such cases, "necessarily there can be no inquiry de novo in another Court as to the truth of the fact." RUFFIN, C. J., in State v. Woodfin,
When the contempt is not committed in the presence of the Court, but, as here, by the alleged wilful disobedience of the process of the Court and the publication of grossly inaccurate accounts of its proceedings, with intent to bring the Court into contempt, there is not that necessity for prompt punishment nor the strong reasons which forbid the allowance of an appeal, which exist as to contempts when committed in the presence of the Court. Hence it has always been held that as to contempts not committed in the presence of the Court, an appeal lies. In re Daves,
In this class of contempts on appeal from the Superior Court, the findings of the Judge as to the facts are conclusive, and this Court can only review the law applicable to such state of facts. It is otherwise, however, on appeals from a subordinate Court to the Superior Court. In that case, it is the duty of the Judge to review the findings of facts of the Court below, as well as the rulings of law; and when, in furtherance of justice, it may be required, the Judge can hear additional testimony, either orally or by affidavit, in making up his own (63) findings of fact. The reason of this distinction is not only because of the greater dignity of the Superior Court, and the greater trust reposed in the experience and judgment of its presiding officers, but because that Court is for the trial of matters of fact as well as of law. They are held in the same county where the offence was committed, and can readily procure the attendance of witnesses. The trial in the Superior Court is de novo on the facts and the law. Even the limitation upon the review of the facts, where the amount involved was less than $25, was repealed by the constitutional amendments of 1875. In this Court, errors of law, and not of fact, are reviewable. Though witnesses in some instances may be summoned (The Code, § 963), it has not been the practice. Owing both to the expense of bringing witnesses here from a distance, and the great addition it would make to the already large and steadily increasing volume of business in this Court, to examine affidavits on questions of fact, the Court has adhered to its settled ruling, that it will not pass upon the facts, except as to injunctions and in similar cases, but will take the findings of fact by the Judge who tried the cause below as conclusive. None of these reasons apply to an appeal from an inferior tribunal to the Superior Court. An analagous case is the finding that the prosecution is frivolous or malicious. This *78
finding may be reviewed by the Superior Court on appeal from a lower Court (State v. Murdock,
It is the duty of the Court in passing sentence for contempt, when committed in the presence of the Court, though no appeal lies, to spread its findings of fact upon the record. The Code, § 650. The reasons therefor are given in State v. Mott, and cases cited above. For a (64) stronger reason, the facts should be set out in this class of contempts, in which the party is entitled to have the matter reviewed by an appeal. The judgment of the Mayor, as set out in the record, is fatally defective as to the allegation of publishing grossly inaccurate accounts of judicial proceedings, in that it does not set out and recite in what the publication consisted. It is true, that in the notice to show cause, a certain article is charged and set out as published by the respondents. But in the judgment there is no specific finding that such article, and in the words charged, was published by the defendants. It can only be inferred. This is not sufficient. The article, as published, must be set out in the judgment, and its publication and the intent with which it was published, must be found as facts by the Court. The provision for proceedings "as for contempt" prescribed in The Code, § 654, applies only to civil actions, except subsections 4, 5 and 6. Cromartie v.Commissioners,
That a defendant in contempt proceedings is not entitled to a jury trial upon the controverted facts is well settled. In Baker v. Cordon,
(65) It was contended below that a Mayor has no jurisdiction to punish for contempt, because not named among the officers having that power in The Code, § 651. Apart from the fact that every Court inherently possesses such power independent of statutory *79 enactment, The Code, § 3818, constitutes the Mayor an Inferior Court, and gives him the powers of a Justice of the Peace.
The case must be remanded to the Superior Court, to the end that it may review the findings of fact by the Mayor, as well as his conclusions of law, and if, thereupon, the defendants are adjudged guilty, to pass a definite sentence in accordance with law.
Error.
Cited: Finlayson v. Accident Co.,