149 Iowa 251 | Iowa | 1910
An information was filed with the mayor of the plaintiff town, charging' the defendant with the violation of a town ordinance, defining misdemeanors and the punishment thereof. The mayor issued a warrant on the information, and the defendant was arrested and taken before him. Upon his request the case was continued several days, and upon the day set for the hearing the defendant appeared with counsel and entered a plea of not guilty, wherenpon the case proceeded to trial, resulting in a judgment finding the defendant guilty and imposing a small fine. The defendant then appealed to the district court, where the case was later tried to a jury; the defendant appearing by counsel. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, on which the judgment was entered, from which this appeal is taken.
A motion in arrest of judgment raised the question of the jurisdiction of the mayor, based upon his relationship with the defendant. It appeared that the defendant and
The real contention of the defendant is that, the mayor’s court being a court of inferior jurisdiction, no presumption obtains as to jurisdictional facts, but that they must appear of record; and it is said that it must affirmatively appear that the defendant consented to the jurisdiction of the mayor. This is not the rule, however. In Schlisman v. Webber, 65 Iowa, 114, the court had under consideration a question precisely the same as the one now before us, except that the Schlisman-Webber case was a civil
Even if it be held that section 284 is applicable to this case, the contention of the appellant is fully disposed of by the authority we have just cited and by the language used in that opinion. The defendant appeared in the mayor’s court both personally and with counsel, and, although he must have been fully cognizant of the relationship existing between them, he went to trial without protest or objection; and, inasmuch as it is the almost universal rule that jurisdiction of the person may be conferred by consent, it would be little less than startling to hold in this case, with these facts before us, that the mayor was with
The judgment of the district court is therefore right, and it is affirmed.