22 Ind. App. 553 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1899
— The appellant was prosecuted for the offense known as criminal provocation, the prosecution being commenced before a justice of the peace of Sugar Greek township, Boone county. Upon the application of the appellant, the venue was changed to a justice of the peace of J efferson township in that county. Before the latter justice the appellant .moved to quash the affidavit, on the ground, as stated in the transcript of the justice, that it did not state the township in which the crime was committed. This motion being overruled, the appellant pleaded guilty, whereupon the justice adjudged that he be fined in the sum of $1, etc. The appellant appealed to the court below, where the prosecuting attorney moved to dismiss the appeal, for the reason that the appellant entered a plea of guilty before said justice of the peace of Jefferson township from whom the appeal was taken. This motion was sustained, and, thereupon, the appeal was dismissed.
The appellant has assigned as errors the insufficiency of the affidavit, the sustaining the motion to dismiss the appeal, and the dismissal of the appeal. It is provided by a statute of 1897 (Acts 1897 p. 143, section 1983a TIorner 1897, section 1837a Burns Supp.) that prosecutions for criminal provocation, when brought before a justice of the peace, mayor of a city, or city judge, shall be tried in the township where the offender resides, or where the offense was committed, with a proviso that the defendant shall have the right to a change of venue as provided by law in other cases.
It is proper to inquire, first, whether or not an appeal lies from a justice of the peace to the circuit court in a criminal cause wherein there has been a plea of guilty, and judgment has been rendered thereon. It' has been held in a number of cases that in a criminal cause the defendant against whom judgment has been rendered upon his plea of guilty, entered
Unless it can be said that the hearing and decision upon-
In Hunnel v. State, 86 Ind. 431, in considering the question as to the time for filing a motion for a change of venue, it was said: “In its general sense the term ‘trial’ means the ‘investigation of a matter in issue between opposing parties before a tribunal competent to decide upon it,’ and, in a criminal cause, the term does not include the arraignment, or any other merely preparatory proceeding which may be taken prior to the -time of administering the requisite oath to the jury. United States v. Curtis, 4 Mason, 232, 237.” In State v. Gardner, 8 Ind. App. 440, where the record of a prosecution for a misdemeanor before a mayor showed an arraignment and a plea of not guilty, and an agreement that the court should find the defendant guilty without evidence,
Having reached the conclusion that the court below did not err in dismissing the appeal, because the judgment of the justice of the peace was rendered upon the appellant’s plea of guilty, and therefore without trial, we need not consider the other questions suggested in the assignment of errors; for if the judgment of the justice be erroneous, or even absolutely void, the appellant cannot be relieved from it by appeal, such method of relief not being provided by statute.
Judgment affirmed.