86 Me. 522 | Me. | 1894
This is a process for the seizure of intoxicating liquors, and the case comes to this court on a special demurrer to the complaint and warrant, specifying two grounds of objection : First, that the complaint and warrant constituted a seizure process and not a search and seizui’e process. Second, that the clerk of the municipal court of Lewiston and not the judge received the complaint and issued the warrant.
The defendant contends that the only warrant known to the prohibitory law is one which authorizes a search for, as vrell as a seizure of, intoxicating liquors. But the propriety of requiring an officer to insert in his complaint a false recital that the liquors which he has found and removed, "are still kept and deposited,” by the defendant, or the necessity of a command in the warrant to search premises for what the officer has already taken and knows cannot be found there, is certainly not apparent. The forms set forth in § 63, c. 27, R. S., are declared to be sufficient in lawfor all cases, "to which they purport to be adapted.” The form there provided for a, "complaint incase of seizure,” was prepared before the passage of the Act of 1870, o. 125, § 2 (R. S., c. 27, § 39), and does not, "purport to be adapted,” to the seizure without a warraut there authorized. This change in the statute obviously requires such change in the form of the process as will bring it into conformity with the facts.
In this case the complaint and warrant were properly made in accordance with the facts, and are unobjectionable in form. State v. McCann, 59 Maine, 383.
By the amendment of 1870, above referred to, "no new or additional authority is given to search. It is only to seize. It is to seize wdiat the officer may be enabled to seize without the unreasonable searches prohibited by the constitution. The act to this extent is constitutional.” State v. McCann, supra ; Jones v. Root, 6 Gray, 435 ; Mason v. Lothrop, 7 Gray, 355.
II. The complaint in this case is addressed, "To the Clerk of our Municipal Court for the City of Lewiston,” and is sworn to
As originally constituted, the municipal court for the city of Lewiston was declared to be a court of record consisting of one judge, who was authorized to -appoint a recorder to act in his stead in certain contingencies named in the act. See chap. 636, Private Laws of 1871. But this act was amended by chap. 626 of the Private Laws of 1874. Section 12 of this Act provides that, "The Governor by and with the advice of the council shall appoint a clerk of said court . . . who shall hold his office for the term of four years, who shall be sworn and who shall give bond,” &c. ; and section 13 provides that, "said clerk shall hear complaints in all criminal matters, . . . draw all complaints and sign all warrants and make and sign all processes of commitment, but the same shall be heard and determined as now provided by law, but such complaints, . . . warrants or processes of commitment drawn and signed by the judge of said court shall be equally valid.”
In view of these enactments, it cannot reasonably be questioned that the clerk who heard the complaint and issued the warrant in this case was clearly and explicitly authorized so to do by the legislature ; but it is contended that, while the clerk is only a ministerial officer, the act of examining a complainant and issuing a warrant involves a judicial duty which can only be performed by the judge, and that the statute purporting to authorize the clerk to exercise this function is unconstitutional and void.
An act is deemed ministerial when it is performed, " by an officer in a given state of facts, in a prescribed manner, in obedience to the mandate of legal authority without the exercise of and without regard to his own judgment upon the propriety of the act being done.” Flournoy v. Jeffersonville, 17 Ind. 169 (79 Am. Dec. 468) ; Pennington v. Streight, 54 Ind. 376. See also Longfellow v. Quimby, 29 Maine, 196. And the act is none the less ministerial because the person performing it may have to satisfy himself that the state of facts exists, under which it is his right and duty to perform the act. Betts v. Devine, 3 Conn. 107 ; State v. Knowles, 8 Maine, 71. See also Yates v. Lansing, 5 Johns. 282.
But the general statute respecting the criminal jurisdiction of magistrates (R. S., c. 132, § 6), provides that they, "shall carefully examine on oath, the complainant, the witnesses by him produced, and the circumstances, and when satisfied that the accused committed the offense, shall issue a warrant for his arrest.” Again, section 43, of c. 27, R. S., provides that, "no warrant shall be issued to search a dwelling-house, . . . unless the magistrate before whom the complaint is made is satisfied by evidence presented to him, that intoxicating liquor is there kept for sale in violation of law.” And as the decision of other cases involving the action of this clerk under these statutes, as well as under section 40, is awaiting the result of this one, it seems proper and necessary to examine the question in the broader aspect thus presented.
In enacting the statute investing the clerk of the Lewiston court with the authority in question, the legislature did not encroach upon the, "judicial power.” In State v. Noble, 118 Ind. 350 (10 Am. St. 143), cited by the defendant, the legislature undertook to create the office of commissioners of the Supreme Court and to provide for the election of these officers by the same General Assembly ; and this was deemed unconstitutional. But here the legislature did not assume to elect or " appoint ” a clerk for the Lewiston Court, but provided for his appointment by the Governor and Council in' the same manner and with the same tenure of office as the judge.
Furthermore, this amendment of 1874, imposing the duties in question upon the clerk, must be viewed in connection with the prior statute of 1871, and all the acts constituting the court as it now exists, construed as a whole. The court is still to consist of one judge, and the additional duties imposed upon the clerk requiring the exercise to some extent of attributes of a judicial character, do not necessarily make him a judicial officer within the meaning of the constitution. In Morison v. McDonald, 21 Maine, 550, the recorder of the Municipal Court at Bangor, appears to have been in like manner appointed by the
No specific or precise definition of, "judicial power,” is found in the constitution or laws of the State ; but the phrase is commonly employed to designate that department of government which it was iutented should, "interpret and administer the laws and decide private disputes between or concerning persons.” Cooley’s Const. Lim. 109 ; Merritt v. Sherburne, 1 N. H. 199. By the, "judicial power,” of courts is generally understood, "the power to hear and determine controversies between adverse parties and questions in litigation.” Daniels v. The People, 6 Mich. 381. It is the, "inherent authority, not only to decide but to make binding orders or judgments, which
This conclusion, that the legislature did not exceed its powers in authorizing a clerk,- appointed by the Governor and Council, to perform the duties in question, derives strong support from the practical construction which has been placed upon the constitutional limitations of the legislative and judicial departments of the government from the time of the adoption of our State constitution. In nearly all- of the acts, establishing municipal and police courts in this State from its early history to the present time, will be found provisions authorizing the recording officer of such court, whether appointed by the Governor or by the judge of the court, either uniformly to perform certain duties involving the exorcise of judicial attributes, or occasionally to act in the place of the judge in hearing and determining criminal cases in certain contingencies specified in the different acts. While, therefore, we now decide only the question before us, and while acquiescence for no length of time can legalize a clear usurpation of authority, it must be conceded
It is also worthy of remark that, in Guptill v. Richardson, 62 Maine, 257, a warrant signed by the clerk of the Lewiston court under the Act of 1872, was brought in question, and the court says : "It is true as suggested that the warrant was issued by the clerk, but it vas returnable before the court where the libel was filed. We therefore hold this a sufficient justification for the acts done under it.”
Exceptions overruled. Judgment for the State.