80 W. Va. 698 | W. Va. | 1917
On the petition of Walter S. Hallanan, State Tax Commissioner and ex-offieio State Commissioner of Prohibition, a rule was awarded by one of the judges of this court, in vacation, on the 2nd of August, 1917, returnable on the first day of the present term, against W. S. Thompson, a justice of the peace of Barker’s Ridge District, Wyoming county, commanding him to appear and show cause, if any he can, why he should not be prohibited from proceeding further in the cause of the State v. I. S. Fine, who had been adjudged by respondent guilty, on his own confession, of selling liquors unlawfully, and to pay a fine of $500.00, and serve a term of sixty days in jail. This was on the 21st of July, 1917. Defendant, by his counsel, served notice on the prosecuting attorney of said county on the 26th of July that, on the 7th of the following August, he would move the justice of the peace aforesaid to release him from the jail sentence and fine of $500, stating in the notice that the grounds of the motion would be made known at the hearing.
The power and jurisdiction of the justice to release his judgment is denied by petitioner. In his return respondent alleges that the jail sentence is not final and irrevocable, but that his judgment, in that respect, is that defendant be confined in jail for a period of two months, "or until he is released by due process of law.” He insists that he thus retained control over his judgment, and that he has, by virtue
“The circuit, criminal or intermediate court wherein the said person was sentenced, or the judge thereof in vacation, or a justice before whom any such person was convicted, may, for good cause shown, release such defendant from such imprisonment and suspend the payment of fine and costs, but no such order shall be made by a justice or a judge in vacation of his court, until at least ten days notice in writing be given to the prosecuting attorney of the time and place at which the motion therefor shall be made.”
Petitioner insists said section is not germane to the purposes of the act and, the title of the act containing no mention of the matters dealt with in the section, that it is void because in contravention of Sec. 31, Art. 6 of the Constitution, and for the further reason that, in effect, it attempts to vest the power to pardon and remit fines and penalties in the courts, judges and justices of the peace, which power can be exercised only by the governor in view of Sec. 11, Art. 7 of the Constitution.
The statute in question must be read and considered in connection with the sections of. the act which precede it, beginning with Sec. 108. Thus read and considered the purpose of the legislature appears to have been to provide that
Neither do we construe said section 114 as authorizing a court, or a judge thereof in vacation, or a justice of the peace, to suspend a jail sentence, once imposed as a penalty for an offense, of which the prisoner has been duly convicted. If such is its proper meaning it is void as being in conflict with Sec. 11, Art. 7 of the Constitution limiting the power to remit fines and penalties and grant reprieves and pardons, after conviction, to the governor. In view of that provision, the pardoning power could not properly be vested in any tribunal or person, other than the governor of the state. The legislature no doubt has the power to denominate the cases and prescribe certain regulations for the exercise of the pardoning; power by the governor, but it certainly can not confer that power upon any other person or tribunal. We must construe the act, if possible, to give it some effect rather than none at all, and at the same time harmonize it with the Constitution. Sec. 108 of the act provides that all male persons, over the age- of sixteen years, hereafter convicted of an offense the penalty of which is imprisonment in jail or both fine and such imprisonment, shall be sentenced to work on
The judgment of respondent in the present instance, is only for payment of a fine and imprisonment of accused in jail for a period of sixty days; it does not sentence him to work on the public roads during the period of his confinement in jail. TIence there is no part of his judgment which respondent can, in any event, release or suspend, although he declares in his return that it is his purpose to hear and consider the motion to suspend it, claiming that he has the right by virtue of said Sec. 114 to suspend the jail sentence. The concluding words of the judgment, “or until he is released by due process of law”, does not qualify it, or prevent it from becoming final and conclusive. Such attempted reservation of control over the judgment is wholly nugatory. We will award the writ.
Writ awarded.