73 So. 330 | Ala. | 1916
Appellant lays claim to the office of duty clerk of the inferior criminal court of Mobile county under appointment by the clerk of said court, with the consent of the judge, and in accordance with the provisions of the act of September 25, 1915. The respondent, as treasurer of the county, refused to make payment for petitioner’s services because, as he contends, said act has no application to such a court as the inferior criminal court of Mobile county, but applies only to courts created in lieu of justice of the peace courts in cities having a population of 35,000 or more. The court below entertained a like view and denied the petition.
Section 1 of the above-cited act discloses that the act has reference to those inferior courts in such cities “created in lieu of the justices of the peace.” The sections following designate them as “such inferior courts or courts of common pleas,” or merely as “such courts,” and section 5, under which appellant claims to have received her appointment, refers to the courts as “such court,” all of which designations clearly mean the court referred to in section 1 of said act.
The inferior criminal court of Mobile county was established by the act approved February 23, 1898 (Local Acts 1898-99, p. 1164). It exercises jurisdiction over the entire county, and is given the jurisdiction conferred on justices of the peace in criminal and quasi criminal cases. No effort was made in that act to abolish the office of justices of the peace nor to disturb the jurisdiction of such offices, but on the day of its approval there was also approved an act depriving justices of the peace of criminal jurisdiction within the city limits of Mobile. And on April 15, 1911, there was passed “An act to establish an inferior civil court in lieu of the justices of the peace for all precincts lying within or partly within the city of Mobile.” (Loc. Acts 1911, p. 274.) This latter act was given consideration in the recent case of State, ex rel. Clarke v. Carter, 174 Ala. 266, 56 South. 974, and in the opinion reference was made to section 168 of the state Constitution. It was said that: “While the bill does create
The jurisdiction of that court was confined to precincts lying within the city limits of Mobile, and the title as well as the first section of the act expressly announced the establishment of the ■court as in lieu of justices of the peace of Mobile county. Such, ■however, was not the case with the inferior criminal court established in 1898.
The question of the establishment of inferior courts in certain cities in lieu of all justice courts, as authorized by section 168 of our Constitution, was recently reviewed by this court in ■opinions rendered in response to questions certified by the Court -of Appeals in the case of State v. Roden, 15 Ala. App.........., 73 South. 657.
The writ was properly denied, and the judgment of the court below is accordingly affirmed.' ’
Affirmed.