100 P. 1124 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1909
The motion of the defendant in error to dismiss the appeal herein will first receive our attention. It is urged that this motion to dismiss should be allowed, because said appeal is not on a judgment for the accused in quashing or setting aside an indictment or information, that said appeal is not upon an order of the court arresting the judgment in said case, and because said appeal is not upon a question reserved to the state of Oklahoma. We think this appeal is authorized under the third subdivision of section 5608, Wilson's Rev. Ann. St. 1903, and therefore said motion is not well taken, and the same is overruled.
The principal proposition in this case is the question: Did the county court err in sustaining the motion of the accused below, which resulted in his discharge, for the reason that said, county court had no jurisdiction to try the accused under the indictment presented in the district court and filed in the county court. The accused, in support of said motion, contended that inasmuch as the indictment in this case was found and returned into the district court of said county, as authorized by section 1, art. 2, c. 16, p. 210, Session Laws 1907-08, the county court had no jurisdiction unless said district court transferred said case to the county court. Section 2, art. 2, c. 16, p. 210, Sess. Laws 1907-08, reads as follows:
"It shall be the duty of the clerk of the district court, without delay, to deliver the indictment in all cases transferred, together with all the papers relating to each case, to the proper court or justice of the peace, as directed in the order of transfer; and he shall accompany each case with a certified copy of all the proceedings *192 taken therein in the district court, and also with a bill of the costs that have accrued therein in the district court, and the said costs shall be collected in the court in which said cause is tried, in the same manner as other costs are collected in criminal cases."
Section 3 of said article and chapter reads as follows:
"All cases transferred from the district court shall be entered on the docket of the court to which they are transferred and all process thereon shall be issued, and the defendant tried in the same manner as if the cause had originated in the court to which they have been transferred."
Was this case transferred from the district court to the county court in compliance with said statute? If so, then the county court had jurisdiction. If not, said motion to dismiss and discharge the prisoner was properly allowed.
Section 183, p. 48, of Bunn's Constitution of this state, provides:
"The county court shall have jurisdiction concurrent with justices of the peace in misdemeanor cases, and exclusive jurisdiction in all misdemeanor cases in which justices of the peace have no jurisdiction."
Section 190, p. 50, Bunn's Constitution of this state, provides:
"Justices of the peace shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the county court in all misdemeanor cases in which the punishment does not exceed a fine of two hundred dollars or imprisonment in the county jail for not exceeding thirty days, or both such fine and imprisonment."
Section 1, art. 1, c. 27, p. 284, Sess. Laws 1907-08, provides:
"County courts, in their respective counties, shall have such jurisdiction and exercise such powers as have been conferred upon them by the Constitution of this state, and shall have such other jurisdiction and powers as are herein conferred or may be conferred by law."
Under the Constitution and laws of this state there can be no doubt that the illegal selling of whisky, as charged in the indictment in this case, is a misdemeanor, specifically defined by section 1, art. 3, c. 69, p. 603, Sess. Laws 1907-08, commonly known as the "Billups Bill, Senate Bill No. 61." This question has been settled by the Supreme Court of this state in the case of Ex parte *193 Cain,
The plaintiff in error contends that a certificate of transfer in the following form is sufficient:
"State of Oklahoma, County of Coal — ss.: In the District Court, County and State Aforesaid. State of Oklahoma v. Henry Clifton. Numbered 12. An indictment for selling whisky. And it appearing that cause is a misdemeanor, and that this court has no jurisdiction to try the same. It is therefore ordered that said cause be, and the same is hereby, transferred to the county court of Coal county, state of Oklahoma. A.T. West, District Judge. Transferred as per the foregoing order. 4 — 11 — 08, H.A. Davis, District Clerk. Geo. E. Jahn." Indorsed: "Filed May 28, 1908. R.H. Wells, Co. Judge, by Sallie Bruce, Clerk."
It is conceded that the order of transfer just quoted was, at the time of the filing of the motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction by reason of the alleged improper transfer of this case to the county court, the only order of transfer, and the only certificate is the alleged certificate reading as above: "Transferred as per the foregoing order. 4 — 11 — 08, on file in said county court. [Signed] H.A. Davis, District Clerk. Geo. E. Jahn." It appears from the record that, after the motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction by the court had been by the county court sustained, said court permitted the district clerk to file certain papers showing transfer of this case, and ordered the clerk of the court to file such papers and date the filing thereof as of July 8, 1908, which last-named date ante-dated the action of the court in sustaining said motion. It is true that section 2, art. 2, c. 16, p. 210, Sess. Laws 1907-08, above quoted does not prescribe a proper form of transfer, but it does direct that the clerk of the district court shall, without delay, deliver to the proper court, the indictment, together *194 with all the papers relating to each case, and he shall accompany each case with a certified copy of all the proceedings taken therein in the district court, and also with a bill of the costs that have accrued. The defendant in error contends that there was not such compliance with the law providing for transfer of indictments in misdemeanor cases to the county court as would give the county court jurisdiction in this case. The second, third, fourth, fifth, and sixth grounds urged in said motion of the accused are not, in the opinion of this court, well taken, and therefore each and all are overruled. This then leaves but the first ground of said motion, which reads as follows: "The said court has no jurisdiction to try defendant under the indictment presented and filed in the county court of Coal county, Okla."
The state of Texas has a statute practically the same as said section 2, art. 2, c. 16, p. 210, above quoted, and its courts have been called upon to construe said section. In the case ofAustin v. State,
"Appellant was tried and convicted of inclosing a large tract of land, being a part of the unappropriated public domain, without having leased the same from the state. The indictment was presented in the district court on March 13, 1893, and said district court adjourned on the 18th of the same month. The record of the presentment was duly entered upon the minutes of the court. So far as this record discloses, this was the only order made by the district court in reference to this case. On the 21st day of November, 1893, the clerk of the district court of Coke county sent to the county court a transcript of the orders made in the district court with reference to the indictment herein. He certifies to the correctness of said transcript, and we find the only order entered in said district court was as stated above. When the case was called for trial in the county court, appellant filed a plea to the jurisdiction, because there had been no order entered in the district court transferring the indictment from that court to the county court. It was further urged as a plea to the jurisdiction that the itemized bill of costs did not accompany the transcript of the orders, as required by the statute. By article 473 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1895, it is made the duty of the clerk *195 of the district court, without delay, to deliver indictments in cases transferred from said district court to the inferior courts, as directed by the order of transfer made in the district court, and to accompany each case with a certified copy of all the proceedings taken therein in the district court, and also that the bill of costs accruing in the district court shall accompany the same. Without the order of transfer having been entered by the district court, the clerk has no authority to transfer indictments from the district courts to the inferior courts. The law has not vested in him such authority, and, without the order of such transfer by the district court, the inferior court can acquire no jurisdiction, because the indictments could not be filed therein. It is also made the duty of the clerk to include in the transcript a bill of the costs that have accrued in the case up to and including the fees of the transcript. Because the transcript made out by the district clerk and filed in the county court does not contain an order of transfer from the district court to said county court, the plea to the jurisdiction should have been sustained. Because it was not done, this judgment is reversed and the cause remanded."
In Cobb v. State,
"On a transfer of a criminal case from the district court to the county court, the transcript was vitiated where no seal was attached thereto, and the affixing of the seal after the papers were filed in the county court was unauthorized."
See cases in point 14 Cent. Dig. § 202.
In Johnson v. State (Tex. Cr. App.) 79 S.W. 27, the same court holds:
"A prosecution based on an indictment returned by the grand jury in the district court should have been dismissed by the county court on motion made before defendant announced `Ready for trial,' where no order of transfer from the district to the county court appeared in the record."
See, also, Mitten v. State, 24 Tex. App. 346 [
This court thinks, and so holds, that the certificate of attempted transfer, consisting of a printed slip, as shown by the record in this case, was not a proper certificate, and did not properly transfer this case from the district court to the county court, and therefore *196 the county court had no jurisdiction to hear and determine the same.
The next question to be considered is: Did the papers filed under date of July 8th, after the motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction had been granted by the county court, cure the record and give the county court jurisdiction? This court, in the case of Ex parte Wade, ante, p. 100,
"When a grand jury returns into a district court an indictment for a misdemeanor the district court is without power to issue a warrant for the arrest of the defendant upon such indictment. The power of the district court is limited to make an order directing the transfer of such case to the court having jurisdiction. * * *"
The district court, after making the order of transfer, had spent its jurisdiction and could do nothing more in the case. This court feels that this is a proper time to encourage the clerks of both the district and county courts, and the county attorneys, to carefully consider the statutes with respect to the transfer of cases from the district to the county courts, and to comply with the requirements of the same. This decision contains our first impressions in regard to the propositions involved herein, and, while it is based upon the law as we see it, is not free from the desire of this court to instill in the minds of the proper officers a wholesome regard for the statutes referred to and the necessity for a more careful compliance with the provisions thereof. The alleged certificate of transfer filed in the county court was, in our opinion, insufficient to give said court jurisdiction in this case and the motion to discharge the accused for want of jurisdiction in said court was properly allowed, and no error was thereby committed.
Therefore the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
FURMAN, PRESIDING JUDGE, and DOYLE, JUDGE, concur. *197