In re Tull

25 Del. 126 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1910

Woolley, J.

delivering the opinion of the court:

We understand that this action is based upon the statute, the particular section of which (Rev. Code 1852, amended to 1893, c. 92, p. 697, § 2) reads as follows:

“Sec. 2. The said judges, or any two of them, shall have full power and authority to examine, correct and punish the contempt, omissions, neglects, favors, corruptions and defaults of all justices of the peace, sheriffs, coroners, clerks and other officers within this State; and also shall award process for levying all such fines, forfeitures and amercements as shall be imposed, or recovered, in said court; and generally shall minister justice to all persons, and exercise the jurisdictions and powers hereby granted them, concerning the premises, according to law and equity, as fully *128and amply, to all intents and purposes whatsoever, as the justices of the King’s Bench and Common Pleas at Westminster, or the Chancellor of England, may or can do.”

We are of the opinion that, when the administration of criminal law is vested in an officer not there specifically named, the office of an alderman is included within the general phrase “other officers,” and therefore this court has jurisdiction of this rule.

From the hearing in this case we eliminate from this decision any imputation upon this respondent of favors or corruptions or contempt in his office of alderman. We are of opinion, however, that, under this proof, he is guilty of omissions, neglects and defaults which, while small in their character, go to a principle of liberty and independence which makes this case more important than the amount of the penalty imposed would indicate.

Upon the evidence of the respondent himself it appears that he failed to charge these boys with any offense under the provisions of the town charter, and tried them for an offense that is not embraced within the charter. It then appears that Valiant was fined and imprisoned for an offense of which he was not tried in an orderly manner, and to which he had not pleaded guilty.

We think that when an officer, be he justice of the peace or an alderman, is clothed by the law with criminal jurisdiction, he must keep a record of his judicial proceedings in order that a person brought before him may avail himself of the appelate process that may be guaranteed by the law, without which the law’s guaranty is of no avail. The Constitution guarantees the right of certiorari. We think that in this case, not through bad motives, but through the omissions, neglects and defaults, the respondent was in the wrong in not trying the case in an orderly way upon a charge properly laid, and in convicting the boy without such an orderly hearing or without a plea of guilty; and that he was in error in not keeping a record of his proceedings so that the wrong in his proceedings could be corrected by another tribunal, and therefore we are constrained to make the rule absolute.

This provision calls for punishment, and the punishment in this case depends very much upon the character of the offense. *129We are not inclined to make the punishment severe at all, and we will make it as light as we can, consistent with keeping the proceeding respectable; therefore we impose a fine of five dollars and the costs of this proceeding.