209 N.W. 750 | Minn. | 1926
In presenting the appeal, counsel for appellants contend that the ordinance upon which the prosecution was based is invalid and that perjury cannot be committed on the trial of a person charged with a violation of an invalid ordinance.
1. It is conceded that, since the enactment of L. 1911, p. 493, c. 365, no city or village has had authority to adopt an ordinance limiting the speed of motor vehicles. Chapter 365 has been amended from time to time, but has always retained a provision that no ordinance "in respect of or limiting the use or speed of motor vehicles" shall have any force or validity. The effect to be given to the word "use" is the point upon which opposing counsel are unable to agree. The above quoted provision is found in L. 1925, c. 416, § 26. The state contends that this section should be limited in its application to ordinances or parts of ordinances which regulate the speed of motor vehicles; that the words "use or" are surplusage and the statute should be read as though it did not contain them. *141
Chapter 416 is entitled: "An act to regulate traffic and the operation of vehicles upon streets and highways," etc. It prescribes the manner in which motor vehicles shall be equipped and driven. It has more to say on that subject than on the subject of speed. It establishes uniform rules which are operative throughout the state, to the exclusion of local regulations not expressly or impliedly authorized by chapter 416.
This court has twice used language opposed to a construction of the act which would practically eliminate the word "use." In Park v. City of Duluth,
"What this section [Sec. 2637, G.S. 1913] forbids is local regulation of the use or speed of motor vehicles. We do not think that it was the purpose to limit cities in their power to adopt their own scheme of taxation. Only indirectly does taxation limit the use of vehicles which occasion the tax."
In Bruce v. Ryan,
The ordinance under which Mandehr was prosecuted deals with the same subject matter as § 29 of c. 416, but is not inconsistent therewith. The state makes much of this fact.
The rule that a general law and a local ordinance may stand together provided the ordinance is not inconsistent with the law is well settled, so is the rule that regulations purely municipal in their character may be adopted by any city or village by virtue of its police powers, to the end that good order in the larger centers of population may be preserved. These rules were first announced in State v. Lee,
The true purpose of all municipal ordinances is to regulate local affairs. The sobriety of drivers of motor vehicles is not a local affair. It is a matter of concern to all the people of the state. A driver under the influence of intoxicating liquor is a menace to everyone who happens to be on the road or street while he is at large. It is true that he is a greater menace when he selects a busy street as a driveway instead of a remote country road. The legislature might have said that the enactment of c. 416 should not prevent municipalities from adopting ordinances regulating the operation of motor vehicles, or it might have been silent on that subject. In either case, an ordinance consistent with the statute would have been valid and enforceable. But, in the face of its express declaration that an ordinance limiting the use or speed of motor vehicles shall have no force or effect, there is no room for the application of the rule of State v. Lee, supra.
It is too clear for argument that to drive a motor vehicle is to use it, and the conclusion follows that Mandehr's conviction was unauthorized for the reason that the ordinance had been superseded by the statute. In reaching this conclusion, we have consulted with profit Helmer v. Superior Ct.
2. With substantial unanimity the authorities agree that, if the court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter of an action in which an oath was administered to a witness who testified falsely concerning a material matter, a conviction of the crime of perjury cannot be sustained. Smith v. State,
Perjury is defined by G.S. 1923, § 10016, reading in part as follows: *143
"Every person who shall swear * * * that he will truly testify * * * in an action * * * or on any occasion in which an oath is required by law, or is necessary for the prosecution or defense of a private right or for the ends of public justice, or may lawfully be administered, and who, in such action * * * shall wilfully and knowingly testify * * * falsely in any material matter, or shall state in his testimony * * * any material matter to be true, which he knows to be false, shall be guilty of perjury."
In State v. McCarthy,
For the purposes of this appeal, it is conceded that the appellants wilfully and knowingly testified falsely concerning a material matter, but it is contended that the false testimony was not given on an occasion in which an oath was required by law or might be lawfully administered, because the municipal court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action and was proceeding wholly without authority of law.
Jurisdiction is authority to hear and determine a matter in controversy. Montour v. Purdy,
The power to hear and determine a cause is jurisdictional; it is coram judice whenever a case is presented which brings this power into action. Wood v. Myrick,
Jurisdiction depends upon the right of the court to hear the matter in controversy and to declare the law. State v. Eberhart,
Jurisdiction is the power to hear and determine, but it involves also the power to give the judgment that is entered. State v. Reed,
It was the duty of the municipal court, when Mandehr was brought before it, "to hear the matter in controversy and to declare the law." State v. Eberhart, supra. It was necessary to determine whether the ordinance was in force and effect or whether it had been superseded by L. 1925, p. 666, c. 416. That was a question of law. The record in the municipal court is not before us and we do not know whether the validity of the ordinance was questioned at the trial. It could have been and if it was it became the duty of the court to determine the question. If the court erroneously determined that the ordinance was valid, jurisdiction to consider and try the case on the merits would not be lost. With practical unanimity the authorities agree that the power to decide a question presented to a court necessarily carries with it the power to decide wrongly as well as rightly. The cases are collected in 15 C.J. pp. 729, 730. Foltz v. St. Louis S.F. Ry. Co. 8 C.C.A. 635, 60 F. 316, Ex parte Moran, 75 C.C.A. 396, 144 F. 594, and Calhoun v. Bryant,
To return to the original question. If the municipal court had power, as we think it had, to determine in the first instance whether the ordinance was valid or invalid, and, if it reached the conclusion that the ordinance was valid it would necessarily proceed to try Mandehr to determine his guilt or innocence. The fact that he was tried indicates that the court either held the ordinance valid or did not consider the question at all because it was not raised. The judgment of conviction was erroneous. It would have been reversed on appeal, or Mandehr might have been released from *145
imprisonment in a habeas corpus proceeding. In re White,
There was no usurpation of judicial power. The municipal court has jurisdiction of prosecutions for violations of ordinances of the city of St. Paul. It had jurisdiction over Mandehr's person and over the subject matter of the litigation. The rule upon which appellants' counsel rely is not applicable. In giving the false testimony the appellants committed the crime of perjury, notwithstanding the fact that the ordinance had been annulled by the statute.
Order affirmed.