6 Vt. 479 | Vt. | 1834
The opinion of the court was pronounced by
— The main question in this case is, whether the justice, who was a rated inhabitant of the town where the offence was committed, and into the treasury of which town the fine was to be paid, had jurisdiction of the cause. Considerable learning and research have been shown by the respondent’s counsel, to shew that by the common law, witnesses, jurors and judges, are incapacitated by being interested. This as to witnesses and jurors, is clearly shown by the authorities cited, and as to judges, that they are not to try causes wherein they are parties; but that an interest in the cause or question, shall exclude a judge from sitting, does not so clearly appear, and what degree of interest or that the smallest fraction of interest, as contended for shall render them incompetent to decide a causa. The cases cited to this point, are first, where
In our revised statute of 1797, justices of the peace “ were fully authoized and empowered to hear, try and determine all pleas and actions of a criminal nature, where the fines and forfeitures are within the sum of seven dollars.” At that time and even since, there have been penal statutes in which the penalty goes to the towns; and the statute upon which the present prosecution is founded, is of that description; and during this time, now nearly forty years, the uniform and invariable practice has been, for justices to hear and determine these criminal cases in the same manner as those where the forfeiture or fine goes to the state, and this without dispute or question. It is also observable, that this statute of 1797 is a transcript of 1787. The latter only substitutes {$7 for 40s.; so that the practice has the sanction of nearly half a century. But it is now contended, that this has been contrary to the fundamental principles of jurisprudence, and the very nature and structure of justice, and against the evident meaning of the legislature. Nothing is more true in theory, than that every judge or justice who tries a cause, should not have the slightest interest in its determination, and nothing more true in fact and in practice, than that, as it respects state -eases in general, there is no such judge op-justice in Vermont. Still crimi
Perhaps some light can be thrown upon the views of the legislature in relation to the effect that a corporation interest should have upon the jurisdiction of justices, even in civil cases, by recurring to the poor laws. The first act of 1797, authorized two justices, not of the same town, to make an order of removal. Why this exception, unless it was supposed that without it they might ? These orders are in favor of the town, and unappealed from, are conclusive and often of great value, and what did experience prove? Why, that it was a precaution of delicacy and not of use, that it made expense and trouble without benefit. By a preamble in the middle of the pauper act of 1801, the difficulty is remedied, and by the 5th section it is provided that the justices of the town may act, which provision is again enacted in 1817; and now justices try these important though comparatively rare causes in favor of their own towns, and who suffer therebya.? But it is said that the 23d section of the justice act declares that no justice shall try any cause, where he is directly or indirectly interested in the matter or cause to be determined. Probably
As to the amendment, the authorities and the practice are both in favof of it, and we see no objection thereto, because the complaint is signed by the town grand juror, that is, because it-is a complaint rather than an information or indictment. Either of those can be amended by those who presented them by leave of the court, and so was this.
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.