124 Ga. 801 | Ga. | 1906
(After stating the foregoing facts.) From 1777 until 1877 the General Assembly was authorized to lay out new counties whenever in its judgment it was necessary for the public welfare. The power to lay out new counties was expressly recognized in the earlier constitutions of the State, and was never taken away by any of the later constitutions until 1877. The last exercise of this power prior to the adoption of the present constitution was the creation of the county of Oconee in 1875, just two years before the convention assembled which declared that no new counties should thereafter be created. In 1904 the constitution was so amended as to authorize the creation of eight additional counties. The General Assembly in 1905, exercising the power granted to it,
The provisions of the constitution fixing the venue in all cases both civil and criminal was intended to be exhaustive. It is therein declared that divorce cases shall be brought in the county where the defendant resides, if a resident of this State; if the defendant be not a resident of this State, then in the county where the plaintiff resides; that suits against the maker and indorser of a promissory note, or drawer, acceptor, or indorser of a foreign or inland bill of exchange, or like instrument, residing in different counties, shall be brought in the county where the maker or acceptor resides. Civil Code, §§5869-5873. It is to be noted that in the provisions just referred to the constitution fixes the venue by the use of the words, “shall be brought.” The constitution declares that cases respecting titles to land shall be tried in the county where the land lies. Equity cases shall be tried in the county where the defendant resides against whom substantial relief is prayed. Suits against joint obligors, etc., may be tried in either county, and all other civil suits shall be tried in the -county where the defendant resides, and all criminal cases shall be tried in the county where the crime was committed, except’ where the judge is satisfied an impartial jury can not be obtained. Civil Code, §§5870, 5871, 5872, 5874.
The county of Crisp was created by an act approved August 17, 1905. It provided that the first election for county officers should be held on the first Wednesday in October, 1905. There is nothing in the act relating to cases pending in the courts of Dooly county, from which the new county was carved. Acts 1905, p. 52. On August 21, 1905, an act was approved providing for the organization of new counties. Acts 1905, p. 46. The only provision in
The term “suit” can not, without serious strain, be construed to include a_ criminal case. The act is therefore silent in regard to the status of criminal cases, involving offenses committed in the territoiy of the new county, which were pending in the old county at the time the new county was created. While the act provides for the transfer of-civil eases, an investigation of the authorities as to the effect of the creation of a new county upon such cases may throw some light upon the status of a pending criminal case. When an act providing for the creation of a new county provides for the future election of county officers, the territory embraced within the' limits of the new county does not become a county until the organization of the new county is perfected. As was said by Sanderson, J., in People v. McGuire, 32> Cal. 143, “In constituting a county something more is required than defining its boundaries. A local government must be provided, and the creation of a county is not
In Murdock v. Little, 18 Ga. 719, a recovery in ejectment was had in Crawford county, and at a subsequent term a motion was made to set aside the judgment and execution issued thereon, because no process was annexed to the declaration. Pending this motion the land in dispute was cut off into Taylor county; and it
We will now call attention .to some of the rulings made by the courts of other States. In Security Co. v. Kauffman, 108 Cal. 214 (41 Pac. 467), it was held that a suit to foreclose a lien on land was triable in the old county, notwithstanding the fact that the land upon which the lien was claimed was embraced within the limits of a new county since the suit was begun. Particular emphasis was laid upon the fact that the constitution of that State required only that such cases should be “commenced” within the county 'in which the land was situated, and did not require that the action should be tried in that county. In Spalding v. Kelly, 66 Mich. 693 (33 N. W. 803), it was held that the legislature had authority to provide that a pending ejectment suit should be tried in the old county, and not in the new county which .embraced the
The constitution of the State, in fixing the venue of criminal cases, recognizes the political division of the State into counties, and fixes the place of trial as that particular subdivision in which the crime was committed. The accused is entitled not only to a jury of the vicinage, but he is also entitled to the convenience resulting from a trial where the witnesses are more than apt to inside. The county wheré the crime is committed is, in the meaning of the constitution, that political subdivision of the State, styled county, which embraces the place where the crime was committed. The General Assembly can no more deprive the defendant of this right by the creation of a new county than it can by the change of a county line. The fact that the case is pending against him at the time that the new county is created does not deprive him of the right to demand that he be tried in the county in which the crime was committed, although the county, as such, was not in existence at the time the offense was perpetrated. What the constitution., guarantees is a trial in the county where the offense was committed, not the beginning of a prosecution in that county. We will not at this time go to the extent of holding that the creation of the new county absolutely deprives the courts of the old county of jurisdiction of criminal cases pending therein, where the offense was committed in the territory'embraced in the new county; for it may be-that if the accused went to trial in the old county without objection, or if he made an express waiver of his right to insist upon a transfer, to the new count}'', a judgment in the old county would be conclusive both upon him and the State. Upon this question we now
Judgment reversed.