144 So. 699 | Miss. | 1932
Appellant was charged by an affidavit, made before the mayor and ex-officio a justice of the peace of and within the town of Carthage, with the unlawful possession of intoxicating liquor "contrary to the statutes in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State of Mississippi." A warrant for the arrest of appellant was issued by the mayor as ex-officio justice of the peace; the warrant being addressed "to any lawful officer of Leake County." Appellant was arrested and was tried before the ex-officio justice of the peace and a jury, was convicted, and was sentenced; from which judgment he appealed to the circuit court, and on a trial de novo therein was again convicted.
Several points have been made by appellant, and, because error was confessed by the Attorney-General in his brief, we assume that it is our duty to discuss the more important of these points, at least briefly; but we reach them in our order rather than in the order of the assignment of errors.
First. It is contended that no valid judgment was entered by the ex-officio justice of the peace. This point is based on the fact that the mayor kept no separate docket as ex-officio justice of the peace, but used only one docket for the cases heard by him as mayor and those heard as an ex-officio justice of the peace. Appellant insists that, because section 2535, Code 1930, requires a police justice to keep a separate docket as justice of the peace, then the entry by an ex-officio justice of the peace of a judgment of conviction on any other docket than a separate docket is a nullity, and that the case stands as if no trial had ever been had in the court of the ex-officio justice of the peace. Whether the last line of said section 2535, Code 1930, which requires a police justice, in a municipality of more than seven thousand *299 inhabitants, to keep a separate docket as justice of the peace applies to small towns and villages, where but little ex-officio justice of the peace business is done by the mayor, we do not here decide; but we do say that the requirement, even if it applies to small towns, is not jurisdictional, and the entry of a proper judgment in a state case on the mayor's docket, so long as it clearly shows that it is a state case rather than a municipal prosecution, is valid in so far as the matter of dockets is concerned.
Second. Appellant contends that the entire transcript from the court of the ex-officio justice of the peace as certified to the circuit court is without any legal validity, and gave no jurisdiction to the circuit court, because the several papers certified and the final certificate did not bear the seal of the court of the ex-officio justice of the peace; and appellant cites Dennis v. Town of Walnut Grove,
Third. Appellant contends that the prosecution was allowed in the circuit court to vary the certified transcript by parol, contrary to the holding of this court in Washington v. State,
There are four other errors assigned, as, for instance, that the evidence is insufficient and others of similar character. We have examined them, and find that they are not well founded.
Affirmed.