The defendant was arrested on the complaint of one Albert IToehne, charging him with having unreasonably refused and neglected to provide for his wife and minor children, being of sufficient ability or able to earn the means of their support. He was brought before the judge of the municipal court of the city of Sheboygan for his examination, and on such examination he was bound over or held to the circuit court of Sheboygan county for trial. The defendant appearing in the circuit court, and
This is a very broad and general question. We may well ask, Why not? What are the grounds on which the jurisdiction of the court is questioned? It may be that the learned judge of the circuit court had in mind only the reason stated by the counsel of the defendant as the ground of the above motion. That reason was that said statute required the defendant to be bound over or held for trial to the county or municipal court of the county, and not to the circuit court. Rather than to dismiss the report on account of the vagueness of the question, we will consider that as the true and only reason why the court had not jurisdiction of the case; that being the only reason appearing in the record.
Sec. 2 of the act provides that the several county and municipal courts shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit courts of the offense, and shall be deemed open
Ch. 162, Laws of 1851, creates or defines the misdemeanor of selling spirituous and intoxicating liquors, etc., and sec. 6 provides that “ justices of the peace shall have power to hold a court to hear, try, and determine all offenses against or growing out of the provisions of this act and arising within their respective counties; provided that the accused party shall not be deprived of a jury trial nor of his right of appeal.” Allen v. State, 5 Wis. 329, arose from an indictment for the above offense in the circuit court. The principal ground of demurrer to the indictment was that the circuit court had no original jurisdiction of the offense. This court held that the jurisdiction'of
These cases are in point. This section 4 contains no language giving exclusive jurisdiction to,the county and municipal courts, or excluding or prohibiting that of the circuit courts. Construing sections 2 and 4 together, section 4 is, in effect, as if it read: “ To the county, municipal, or circuit court of the county.”
The brief of the defendant’s counsel contains some other stray points not properly within the report. Eirst, the act does not confer criminal jurisdiction on the “ probate courts of the state,” but on the county courts, and we are not referred to any part of the constitution that is violated by it. Second, the act does, expressly provide for a jury trial in sec. 6. Third, the judge of the municipal court of the city of Sheboygan had authority to cause the arrest of the accused, and to take the examination as a “ judge of a court of record,” and the record states that a preliminary examination was had before him. Fourth, the act is not unconstitutional on the ground that it makes the offense a misdemeanor and fixes upon it the punishment of a felony. The act inaptly makes the offense a misde
By the Gourt.— The question is answered in the affirmative, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.