Red v. State

52 So. 885 | Ala. | 1910

McCLELLAN, J.

By express provision of the act creating the inferior court in precincts 21 and 37 of Jefferson county, authority was conferred on the judges of that court to take affidavits and issue warrants in misdemeanor cases “directly returnable to any court having final jurisdiction thereof.” — Loc. Acts 1903, pp. 379, 381. In this instance a judge of that inferior court took an affidavit charging appellant with a misdemeanor, and issued a warrant thereon returnable before the “judge of the criminal court of Jefferson county.” The accused was promptly arrested and made a bond for his appearance “at the present term of the criminal court of Jefferson county.”

The improper direction for the return before the “judge” of the criminal court was an immaterial irregularity. — Carnley v. State, 162 Ala. 94, 50 South. 362; Pell City Man. Co. v. Swearingen, 156 Ala. 397, 47 South. 272.

There is no constitutional inhibition against the taking of affidavits charging misdemeanors, and the issuance of warrants therefor returnable to criminal courts created by statute, by justices of the peace.- — Walker v. State, 89 Ala. 74, 8 South. 144; Reeves v. State, 116 Ala. 481, 23 South. 28; Lee v. State, 143 Ala. 93, 95, 39 South. 366. So that, if the argument that inferior courts, established in lieu of the tribunals called “justice courts,” as provided may be done by section 168 of the Constitution of 1901, are, strictly speaking, substitutes only for the justice courts, be accepted, as apt and *99correct, the conclusion does not follow that such a substitutionary court or its judges cannot be properly empowered to take affidavits and order tbe return, in misdemeanor cases, of warrants to tbe criminal courts of counties having those tribunals.

The act (Acts 1894-95, p. 498) considered, as presently pertinent, in Lee v. State, supra, was a restriction on the power of the justices of the peace therein described, and it was held on that appeal that the process was improperly made returnable, in that instance,, to the criminal court instead of to the police court.

There is no merit in the insistence that the act creating tbe inferior court in precincts 21 and 37 (Loc. Acts 1903, p. 379 et seq.), is violative of subdivision 21 of section 104 of tbe Constitution of jl901, in that it increased the jurisdiction of tbe justices of the peace by local law. Aside from other probable reasons, this consideration is satisfactory: That tbe effect of the-latter act was not to increase jurisdiction, even had it dealt with justices of tbe peace instead, as it did, of an inferior court (Const. '§ 168), since to take affidavits and to issue warrants tbe justices already bad jurisdiction, and tbe only result of the amplification was to-broaden tbe effect of an exercise of that jurisdiction previously possessed.

Tbe defendant’s demand for a trial by jury was attempted to be made after the expiration of tbe period-allowed by law for that purpose. It came too late.

The affidavit was not subject to demurrer. . Its words' “A prohibition district and” were surplusage merely.

There is no error apparent on the record; so- tbe judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Dowdell, C. J., and Sayre and Simpson, JJ., concur.

*100ON REHEARING.

Out of deference to the insistence of counsel for appellant, we add a few words of response to the argument for rehearing.

The point taken by counsel for.appellant, on the originál submission, and again on application for rehearing, was understood, and, we think, clearly ruled on, and so, without overruling Lee v. State, 143 Ala. 93, 39 South. 366. There is no occasion to depart from it. Jurisdiction is defined, more amply for the present purpose, in our reports in Vann v. Adams, 71 Ala. 475; but it may well be added that Lee’s Case did not formulate a different definition. The Lee Case pronounced the word jurisdiction, as employed in the title of the act, to be synonymous with power or authority; and so reading it — reading it as not being used in the sense of the “power to hear and determine,” because courts were not being dealt with in that connection — the title of the act was ruled to be sufficiently definite, as well -as comprehensive, to embrace the return of process, issued by the justice of the peace, to the police court. While not now concerned ydth the title of an act, but with the term jurisdiction as employed in subdivision 21 of section 104 of the Constitution and its application to a broad statutory provision authorizing the return of process to certain courts, generally jurisdiction-ed to finally try misdemeanor cases, it was ruled, as appears in the opinion in chief, that the jurisdiction of the inferior judge was to take the affidavit and to issue the warrant thereon; and that the broader provision for the return of the process to courts jurisdictioned to finally try misdemeanants amplified the power or authority, but did not increase the jurisdiction of the inferior judge. — Vann v. Adams, supra. Such is the distinction necessarily recognized in the Lee Case.

Application denied.