State v. . Hawes

65 N.C. 301 | N.C. | 1871

"STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA,

To the Sheriff or other lawful officer of Duplin County — (302)

GREETING:

WHEREAS, Information on the oath of Edward Hall, of said County, has been made to me, J. J. Ward, one of the Justices of the Peace of said County, that W. B. Hawes, John H. Blanton, Jacob D. Matthis, and R. J. T. Hawes, late of said County, did with force and arms at *230 and in the County of Duplin aforesaid, and in the Township of Magnolia, on the 31st day of December, A.D. 1869, commit an assault on the body of the said Edward Hall, against the peace of the State, then and there being. These are, therefore to command you to apprehend the said W. B. Hawes, John H. Blanton, Jacob D. Matthis and R. J. T. Hawes, and have them before me or some other Justice of your County, to answer to the said charge, and be further dealt with according to law. Whereof fail not, and of this warrant make due return. Given under my hand this 4th of January, 1870.

(Signed) J. J. WARD, J. P."

The warrant was executed, and the defendants were taken before James E. Kea, another Justice of the County, who rendered the following judgment:

"It is ordered and adjudged that the defendants, Wm. B. Hawes and R. J. T. Hawes do pay a fine of $5 each and costs, and that defendants John H. Blanton and Jacob D. Matthis pay costs and be discharged.

JAS.E. KEA, J. P."

January 8th, 1870.

It appeared that the Justice, J. J. Ward, did not reside in the Township of Magnolia, but that the Justice Jas. E. Kea, who tried the case and gave the judgment, did reside in said township. His Honor was of opinion that the warrant might be treated as a complaint in writing and under oath of the party injured; but he held it to be insufficient under the act of 1868-'9, ch. 178, sub ch. 4, to give the Justice (303) of the Peace final jurisdiction of the offence, because it omitted to aver that the complaint was not made by collusion with the accused. Under this ruling of his Honor, the jury found against the defendants upon their plea of autrefois convict and pronounced a judgment, from which they appealed. The judgment is affirmed, for the reason given by the presiding Judge, to-wit: that the warrant, (which he considered as a complaint in writing, in which view we also concur,) contains no averment negativing collusion with the accused. *231

This is perhaps the most essential requisite prescribed by the Legislature in order to give a Justice of the Peace jurisdiction in criminal matters, for the great objection heretofore urged to conferring upon them this jurisdiction has been that by collusion, grave offences against the State would be compromised before these inferior Courts, to the exclusion of the jurisdiction of the Superior Courts, thereby scandalizing public justice. To meet this objection the Legislature has, as we think wisely, erected this barrier, which must appear in every complaint in order to give jurisdiction.

This disposes of the case before us, but we will call attention to the fact, which appears upon the record, that while the offences was committed in Magnolia Township, the warrant was issued by a Justice of the Peace, residing in Rockfish Township. It was, however, returned before and tried by a Justice residing in Magnolia Township. We see no objection to this practice. There is nothing in the act regulating the jurisdiction of Justices of the Peace in criminal actions, which require the warrant to be issued by a Justice of the (304) Township in which the offence was committed. The restriction is that no Justice shall have final jurisdiction to determine any criminal action or proceeding for any offence whatever, unless it shall appear on the complaint, and upon proof before him, that the offence was committed within his Township.

It will doubtless be found very convenient, and in furtherance of the ends of public justice, that warrants may be issued by any Justice of the County, to be returned before a Justice of the Township in which the offence was committed.

Per curiam.

Judgment affirmed.

NOTE. — The cases of the State v. Bob Mooney, and State v. AmosHyder, decided at the present term, presented the same question as to the want of an averment in the warrant or complaint that there was no collusion between the defendant and the party injured, and were decided as in the above case of the State v. Hawes.

Cited: S. v. Gardner, 72 N.C. 381; S. v. Jones, 88 N.C. 681. *232

(305)

midpage