66 Tenn. 46 | Tenn. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the court.
Wesley Speck was indicted in the Circuit Court of Moore county for the murder of John Jean, and found guilty of murder in the second degree and sentenced to twenty years confinement in the penitentiary. He has appealed to this court.
The question on which a reversal is asked for arises on the following facts:
The homicide is shown to have been committed within the boundaries of Moore county, as organized and established under the act passed December 14, 1871, for the establishment of that county. But proof was made to show that the killing took place at a still house which is less than eleven miles from
The Circuit Judge charged the jury as follows:
“If you should believe from the evidence that, pursuant to the act of assembly establishing the county of Moore, the commissioners under said act proceeded to run, mark and establish the West boundary line of Moore county, between Lincoln and Moore, and run and established said line previous to the killing, and this line included the place of the killing in Moore county, and after this and before the killing and since the killing, and down to the present time, Moore county had exercised jurisdiction over the territory so included within such lines by collecting the taxes, etc., etc.; under such a state of facts, if they exist, the court is of opinion, and so instructs you, that so far as this question can arise in this case, the offense is properly triable in Moore county, as under such a state of facts it is exercising jurisdiction over such territory; and this would be so although such line, so run and established, or the place of killing, was nearer than eleven miles to the court house of Lincoln county,” etc.
It is not denied that Moore county has been organized as a county, and as such is exercising jurisdiction over the territory embraced within its boundaries as organized, and that the killing took
The Constitution guarantees to the accused in all criminal prosecutions, “ a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the county in which the crime shall have been committed.”
The defendant had a trial by an impartial jury of the county of Moore, in which county, as organized and established by law, the crime was committed. But it. is said that the act of the Legislature, and the action of the commissioners in fixing the Western boundary of Moore county within less than eleven miles of Fayetteville, were null and void, and therefore that the place of the killing was in Lincoln county, and the trial illegally had in Moore county.
The Constitution of 1870 recognized the counties then organized as part of the political organization of the State, and provided that new counties may be established by the Legislature, but ordained that “no line of such county shall approach the court house of any old county from which it may be taken nearer than eleven miles,” etc.
The power to establish new counties is thus expressly conferred on the Legislature, but in exercising this power there is an express prohibition against establishing any line of such new county nearer than eleven miles of the court house of the old county. The old county has a vested right in its territory to
The county of Moore was established in 1871 under this provision, of the Constitution. It was made up of fractions of the territory of Lincoln, Franklin, •Coffee and Bedford counties, and its boundaries specifically set out in the act, but the commissioners appointed to organize the county were empowered “ to make any change in the lines of the county, if found necessary, so as to conform with the requirements of the Constitution of the State.
The commissioners were to have an actual survey of the county made, and an enumeration of the qualified voters in its limits, and also to ascertain by actual survey whether any old county will be reduced ■ below five hundred miles.
Upon the face of the act there is nothing from which it could be inferred that the constitutional requirements were violated. On the contrary, every reasonable precaution was taken to avoid every infraction of those requirements, and hence the legal presumption is that the act is constitutional. The county was organized under this act of the Legislature, and thus established as one of the counties of the State, and as such was claiming and exercising jurisdiction over its territory before and at the time the killing took place, and down to the trial.
Upon this state of facts we are bound to hold, .that when the commissioners executed the powers conferred on them, and the county was organized in pur
When nothing appears on the face of an act shorv--ing its invalidity, it is to be regarded, prima facie, as valid. Respect for the Legislature, therefore, concurs with well established principles of law in the conclusion that .such an act is not void, but voidable only; and it follows as a necessary legal inference from this position, that the ground of avoidance for unconstitutionality can be taken advantage of by those only who have a legal right to question the validity -of the act, and not by strangers: Cooley’s Con. Lim., 164. The eases of Armstrong v. State, 1 Col., 338, and Kirk v. State, 344, are not in conflict with these provisions. The former was an attempt to enforce sec. 4976, which was unconstitutional on its face, because it authorized the trial of a criminal in another county than that in which his crime was committed. The latter was an attempt to enforce sec. 5195, which authorizes a change of venue without the consent of the accused, and was, therefore, palpably unconstitutional. But in the ca.se before us there is nothing in the act of assembly indicating its unconstitutionality, and if so it can be ascertained and declared only upon judicial proceedings instituted for that purpose by some party having the right to raise the question.
The question then presents itself, had the defendant a right to raise the question of the invalidity of the
The defendant had no such vested right of trial in the territory of Lincoln county as would be violated by the act of the Legislature in cutting off a fraction thereof, in making the new county of Moore. His right of trial in the county of Moore was as perfect as it had been in Lincoln county as soon as Moore was organized and established as a political corporation. Down to that time defendant could not be deprived of his right, but after the county of Moore was vested with jurisdiction over her territory the right to inquire into the legality of the Western boundary belonged alone to the county of Lincoln. She had a vested right in all her territory, and could institute
No rule of law is better settled than that which declares every act of the Legislature, which is not palpably unconstitutional on its face, is binding as a law until its unconstitutionality is judicially determined in a proceeding instituted for that purpose, or until some proceeding is instituted to enforce the act, or to declare some right under the act affecting life, liberty or property. The courts have no power to prohibit the Legislature from the exercise of unconstitutional power in legislation; they can only refuse to carry into execution such unconstitutional legislation: 9 Hum., 160. In the case before us the State instituted a proceeding to punish defendant for a murder committed in the territory included within the county .of Moore. Defendant claims that he was illegally tried and convicted, because the still house at which the killing occurred is really on the territory of Lincoln county, although included within the territory of Moore by virtue of the act of the Legislature, and the running of the West boundary line contrary to the Constitution. He insists on his right to be tried ■in Lincoln county, not under, but against the act of
The answer of the State to this claim is, that the-county of ■ Moore had been organized and established under the act of the Legislature; that this act was-prinia fade constitutional and valid, and conferred jurisdiction on the county of Moore; that after the establishment of the county, the courts have no power to inquire into the validity of the act establishing the county; that as to the legality of the West boundary line of Moore, that is a question between Moore and Lincoln counties, and until Lincoln county resorts to judicial proceedings, and has the line declared illegal and void, Moore county exercises rightful jurisdiction up to the line; that the West boundary line of Moore, although it may not have been run and established at the proper distance from Fayetteville, is not therefore void ab initio, but only voidable at the election of Lincoln county upon proper judicial proceedings; that the proceedings before the Circuit Court-was not for the enforcement, of the act of the Legislature establishing the county of Moore, nor was the-defendant claiming any right of life, liberty or property under that act which the court was called on to declare, but was claiming a right in opposition to the-aet; and that in such a proceeding it was not competent for the court to try the question of the unconstitutionality of the West boundary line of Moore-county.