9 Ohio St. 3d 190 | Ohio | 1984
The issue before this court is whether Crim. R. 21, which permits the administrative judge of a court of common pleas to timely transfer misdemeanor cases filed therein by indictment or information to a court of record of the jurisdiction in which venue appears, is applicable to violations of R.C. 3599.091.
R.C. 3599.091 thus requires a specific procedure, not only for the initial probable cause determination, but also for transmittal of findings and evidence only to the prosecuting attorney of the appropriate county, notwithstanding that other officials might well be the object of such transmittals in misdemeanor cases. The statute then grants “exclusive original jurisdiction” to the court of common pleas. Arguably, that phrase, standing alone, might mean simply that the prosecutions must originally be brought in the court of common pleas and thus, as here, be deemed to have been complied with, notwithstanding any subsequent transfer.
However, the statutory grant of exclusive original jurisdiction to the court of common pleas is immediately followed by the qualifying phrase, “over prosecutions under this section.” This phrase clarifies any ambiguity that would be found in the phrase “exclusive original jurisdiction.” Black’s Law Dictionary (5 Ed. 1979), defines “prosecution” as “[a] criminal action; a proceeding instituted and carried on by due course of law, before a competent tribunal, for the purpose of determining the guilt or innocence of a person charged with crime. * * *” Thus, the specialized procedures and the jurisdictional grant to the courts of common pleas “over prosecutions under this section” demonstrate a legislative intent that all prosecutions for violations of R.C. 3599.091 be conducted in their entirety in the same court of common pleas.
For reason of the foregoing, the writ is allowed, and the order of transfer of December 15,1983 is hereby vacated, and respondents are ordered to proceed to trial of the underlying criminal action.
Writ allowed.