26 Colo. 475 | Colo. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to the county court of Washington county. Upon a trial, before the court and jury, under a complaint.and information filed in the police magistrate’s court of the incorporated town of Akron properly charging the defendant George with the violation of its liquor ordinance, he was found guilty and sentenced to pay a fine from which an appeal was taken to the county court. In the latter court defendant filed a motion, supported by affidavit, to dismiss the action and for his discharge from custody upon three general grounds: first, defects in incorporating the town of Akron, rendering its corporate existence illegal because of a failure on the part of the incorporators to comply with cer
The affidavit was confined to the matters embraced within the first two grounds, and was the only bit of evidence in support of the motion. The question of evidence, however, is not important, for the county court disregarded all of the objections except the third and, because of the supposed error in the name of the plaintiff, dismissed the action and discharged the defendant from custody, taxing the costs to the town of Akron.
It is clear that the first two objections could not be interposed in' this action, — certainly in the light of this record. It is not easy to understand the action of the county court from a legal standpoint. It made certain findings of fact, among which was one that the action was commenced before the police magistrate of the incorporated town of Akron, Colorado. It further found that the city of Akron is an incorporated city, having a population of less than 25,000, and upon these repugnant findings entered the order of dismissal. There is not a particle of evidence for the latter finding.
That the order of dismissal was a palpable error appears from the statutes on the subject. At its first session our general assembly enacted that: “ All actions brought to recover any finé or to enforce any penalty under any ordinance of any city or town, shall be brought in the name of the people of the state of Colorado as plaintiff.” Gen. Stats. 1883, sec. 3315 ; Mills’ Ann. Stats, sec. 4433.
In 1885, two separate police magistrate acts were passed, the first approved March 18, and applying to all cities of the state containing a population of 25,000 or more ; the other approved April 9, applicable to all cities having a population of less than 25,000. A complete procedure was therein pro
We infer from its opinion certified up, that it was upon the assumption, miscalled a finding, that the town of Akron was a city having a population of less than 25,000, that the county court based its decision that this action was not brought in the name of the proper party plaintiff. Municipal corporations in this state are divided into three classes: first, cities of the first class; second, cities of the second class, and third, incorporated towns. Gen. Stats. 1883, sec. 3361: Mills’ Ann. Stats, sec. 4482. The foregoing acts of 1885 are applicable only, the one to cities of the first class, the other to cities of the second class, and in no wise relate to, or concern incorporated towns. At the same session of the legislature (Session Laws, 1885, 372; 2 Mills’ Ann. Stats, sec. 4438), there was an amendment to the municipal corporation act relating to the jurisdiction of police magistrates and justices of the peace but no change was made in the provisions of the statute above referred to which require actions to enforce the ordinances of an incorporated town to be brought in the name of the people of the state of Colorado.
That Akron has a population of less than 25,000 is unquestionably true ; but there is no support whatever in this record for the alleged finding of the county court that Akron was a city of either the first or second class. On the contrary, the court itself specifically found that the action was begun before the police magistrate of the incorporated town of Akron, and, in dismissing the action, was careful to tax the costs to the town of Akron. If the county court was permitted to go outside the record, it must have known that Akron, the county seat of the county in which the court was sitting, was not a city of either class, but an incorporated town. It was not necessary, however, for the court to draw upon its fund of judicial knowledge because the complaint itself, on
The judgment of the county court should be reversed and the cause remanded, and it is so ordered.
Reversed.