132 A. 86 | N.J. | 1926
Under the amendment of 1921 (Pamph. L., p. 702) to the act of 1894 (Pamph. L., p. 454; Comp. Stat., p. 3329), the appellant was prosecuted for the statutory penalty for practicing medicine without the required license, and was convicted in said District Court. She now appeals to this court, apparently, on the theory that the proceeding in question is governed by the provisions of the District Court act relating to appeals and judgments in that court.
On the merits, if they were properly before us, the judgment would have to be affirmed. The only point made is that the prosecutor was denied a trial by jury after having demanded the same. This question was adequately discussed and the point settled so far as relates to this court, by the recent opinion of Mr. Justice Lloyd in State Board of Medical Examiners v.Buettel, ante, p. 74. It is intimated that the amendment of 1921, which, for the first time, in precise words prescribed that the trial should be without a jury, is unconstitutional as improperly excluding a jury trial; but we think that the contrary is well settled. The action is a special statutory proceeding committed to a statutory tribunal relating to a statutory offense which was no crime at common law. Consequently, it comes within the class of cases discussed by Mr. Justice Blackstone in 4 Bl.Com. 280, and in 1 Burn Just. 586, tit. "Conviction." It is within the class of cases treated in State v. Rodgers,
The matter, however, is not properly before us, as the judgment in this proceeding is reviewable only by writ of certiorari and not by appeal tantamount to writ of error. It is true that inState Board v. Curtis,
"The fact that the suit is a civil suit does not of itself settle the question of the right to trial by jury. There may be cases where it would be competent for the legislature to prescribe a summary proceeding in a civil suit even where, as at common law, and at the time of the adoption of the constitution of 1844, penalties were recoverable by the ordinary action of debt."
The court went on to decide that a jury was required because of the District Court act, without regard to constitutional questions.
This decision was in June, 1920, and the legislature at its very next session (Pamph. L. 1921, p. 702), by what is called, in the Buettel case, a "clear and unequivocal mandate," directed that the trial be without jury. If the suit had theretofore been a civil suit, subject to the jury features of the District Court act, the legislature evidently meant it to be thereafter a summary proceeding, for not only does the act prescribe that "the court shall proceed in a summary manner without a jury * * * without the filing of any pleadings," but the statutory form of conviction (page 710) states that "C.D., defendant, was * * * convicted * * * in a summary proceeding * * * upon a complaint," c.
The case is thus brought within the settled rule that a proceeding in an inferior tribunal and not according to the course of the common law is reviewable exclusively bycertiorari. Curtis v. Steever,
The appeal will, therefore, be dismissed, with costs.