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State v. Jappson
82 N.J.L. 20
N.J.
1912
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The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garrison, J.

This writ of certiorari brings up the conviction of the prosecutor as putative father in bastardy proceedings and the order of filiation made against him.

The points urged by the prosecutor for the reversal of these orders are as follows:

First. That the j/olice justice lost jurisdiction to make the orders by granting adjournments for a longer period than six weeks in all.

Assuming that section 7 of the Bastardy act (Pamph. L. 1898, p. 959) means what the prosecutor contends that it does, the irregularity was an error that affected the specific jurisdiction of the police justice (see Attorney-General v. Sooy Oyster Co., 49 Vroom 394), and hence the point should have been taken in the proceedings below. It was not, although the prosecutor was present during the trial. As it is, for all that appears, the adjournments were granted to the piosecutor.

*21Second. The order that the prosecutor pay “the sum of $10 for costs and expenses of the confinement,” is justified by the statute in which “costs” means not the costs of the action but the costs of sustenance during confinement.

Third. The death of the overseer of the poor by whom the action was commenced did not canse it to abate; it was brought not in a personal but in an official capacity.

Fourth. Assuming that the orders originally returned were defective in that they did not set forth the evidence on which the conviction rested, the defect was cured by the further return made by the police justice in response to a rule upon him obtained in accordance with the practice sanctioned by this court in Rahway v. Hunt, 45 Vroom 116, and Eckerson v. Mitchell, Id. 347.

The proceedings' of the police justice are affirmed, with costs.

Case Details

Case Name: State v. Jappson
Court Name: Supreme Court of New Jersey
Date Published: Feb 21, 1912
Citation: 82 N.J.L. 20
Court Abbreviation: N.J.
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