28 Tenn. 43 | Tenn. | 1848
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error was indicted, tried, and convicted at the April term, 1848, of the Circuit Court of Grainger county, of an assault and battery upon one John Dalton. Upon being arraigned, the defendant, in the court below, pleaded in bar to the indictment, a former trial and conviction for the same offence, before Henry Williams, a Justice of the Peace for said county, pursuant to the Act entitled “an Act for the punishment of small offences,” passed January 10, 1848. The proceedings in the case before the. Justice, seem to have been regular and are incorporated into said plea. The judgment of the Justice is as follows, viz: “This day came before me, Aaron McGinnis, who being charged upon the within warrant, says he is guilty of the charge in manner and form as is therein alleged against him; and after hearing witnesses as well on behalf of the State as of the defendant, and fully understanding
. It is argued by the Attorney General, that the first section of the Act in question, violates alike the sixth and fourteenth sections of the Declaration of Rights, which now forms the first article of the amended constitution — the latter of which declares, that “no freeman shall be put to answer any criminal charge, but by presentment, indict
1st, It will be observed, in the first place, that the 14th section, cited above, relates only to the mode of prosecution or formal accusation, of offenders. And we are not prepared to hold that its prohibition includes, or at all applies to prosecutions for mere misdemeanors. With a view to this question, let us enquire how the law of England stood, upon this subject, at the time of the American Revolution in order to ascertain what law, in relation to the prosecution of offences our ancestors brought with them to this country, as part of their “birthright and inheritance.” For we apprehend, the rule, that statutes are to be construed in reference to the principles of the common law, is alike applicable to a provision of the constitution, or fundamental law, and for the same reason, that the framers of the law in either case, are not to be presumed to have intended to make any change, or innovation upon the common law further than is expressly declared.
The provision of the 14th section, is in substance, borrowed from Magna Gharta, as are also the provisions of ■several other sections of the “ Declaration of Rights.” The great charter, ch. 29, (9 Henry 3,) declares, that, “no freeman shall be taken, or imprisoned, or be deprived of his freehold, or free customs, or be outlawed, or exiled, or any otherwise destroyed; nor will we pass upon him, nor condemn him, but by lawful judgment of his peers, or b!y^ the law of the land.” 2 Inst. 45. And in his exposition of the meaning of the words, “but by the law of the land” in the foregoing chapter, Sir Edward Coke, says: “For the true sense and exposition of these words, see the statute of 37 Ed. Ill, ch. 8, where the words ‘by the law of the land.’ are rendered, without due process of law, for there it is said,
What, then, was the common law mode of prosecution? Blackstone, in his Commentaries, (4 voh, 301,) informs us> that “this is either upon a previous finding of the fact by an inquest or grand jury; or without such previous finding. The former way is either by presentment or indictment.”
The mode of prosecution, without a previous indictment, or presentment by a grand jury, “to fix the authoritative stamp of verisimilitude upon the accusation,” is that of information. Id. 307-8, Informations, exhibited in the name of the King, are of two kinds; first, those properly his own suits, and filed ex officio by the Attorney General; and, second, those in which, though the King is nominal prosecutor, are yet at the relation of some private person. The objects of the latter, are “any gross and notorious misdemeanors, riots, batteries, libgls, and other immoralities of an atrocious kind.” And when an information of either kind was filed, it was tried by a petit jury of the bounty where the offence arose. And this mode of prosecution, according to the learned commentator, is as ancient as the common law itself. Id. 309. “But these informa-tions are confined, by the constitutional law of England, to mere misdemeanors only; for, whenever any capital offence is charged, the same law requires that the' accusation be warranted by the oath of twelve men, before the
In commenting upon this article, Mr. Justice Story, says: “The first clause requires the interposition of a grand jury, by way of presentment or indictment before the party accused can be required to answer any capital and infamous crime charged against him. And this is regularly true, at the common law, of all offences above the grade of common misdemeanors.” Commentaries on Con., vol. 3rd, Sec. 1778.
The phrase “criminal charge” in the 14th section of our Declaration of Rights, must be taken to have been used in its proper and technical sense. Such is the rule of construction in reference to statutes, unless it clearly appears that the words were intended to be-applied differently from their ordinary legal acceptation.
■ It cannot for a moment be supposed that the term “criminal charge” was intended to comprehend or apply to misdemeanors, because by the common law as well as by statutory enactments in North Carolina, in force in this territory at the adoption of our constitution, and still in force, numerous offences, of the grade of misdemeanors, were summarily tried and punished, without presentment or indictment, by a single magistrate, as in cases of drunkenness, profane swearing, Sabbath breaking; vagrancy, and others that might be enumerated.
We incline to the opinion that the sixth and fourteenth sections of the Declaration of Rights were merely designed to secure the mode of prosecution, in cases of felony, and of the trial by jury, as they respectively existed at the common law. The fact that the practice had been, in North Carolina, and has continued to be in this State, to prosecute misdemeanors, not upon information but by presentment or indictment, weighs nothing' in settling the true meaning of the constitutional provision in question; because, the object of this provision, was not to forbid the prosecution of misdemeanors by the finding of an indictment or presentment by a grand jury, nor does it forbid this; but, to guarantee to every freeman the great privilege and security- of not being put to answer any criminal charge, affecting the right to life or liberty, without a written accusation, previously verified by the oath of a grand jury, in the form of a presentment or indictment.
Second: conceding, for the sake of the argument, that the 14-th section of the Declaration of Rights, applies to misdemeanors, is either the provision of this, or of thé 6th section, violated by the Act in question? The 1st section provides “That any person brought before a Justice of the Peace for any misdemeanor, may plead guilty. Whereupon the Justice shall hear evidence, and fine the offender according to the aggravation of his offence, not less than two dollars, and not exceeding fifty dollars, together with the costs.”.
The fifth section directs, “That if the offence merit a fine exceeding fifty dollars, or imprisonment and fine of any amount, or imprisonment alone, or if the offence is punishable expressly by both fine and imprisonment, the Justice shall not render judgment against the offender, but shall proceed as usual.”
And by the 22d section, is provided, that “if any person proceeding under this Act, abuse, or exceed his power, or exercise power not granted, the injured party, by written petition, alleging the grievance, and verified by his, or his agent’s affidavit, and addressed to the Circuit Judge of the county in which the proceeding is had, shall have a writ of supersedeas and certiorari, granted by any Circuit Judge, by which the proceeding shall be transferred to the Circuit Court of the county, and be there determined as though nothing had been done under this Act.” We confess ourselves utterly unable to perceive how either of the sections of the Declaration of Rights referred'to, is in the slightest degree infringed by any one-of the provisions of the foregoing Act; or that they are in any respect incompatible
We are of opinion, therefore, upon all the foregoing grounds, that the defendant’s plea constituted a bar to the indictment. The judgment of the Circuit Court will be reversed, and arrested, the indictment quashed, and the plaintiff in error discharged.