91 Me. 77 | Me. | 1897
This was an indictment against the respondent for the crime of larceny committed on the twenty-eighth day of January, 1897, with an allegation of a prior conviction in the Municipal Court of Waterville, and an averment of the legal conclusion, based upon Sect. 5, Chap. 120, R. S., that the respondent was a common thief.
In support of the allegation of a former conviction of larceny, the state introduced without objection the following docket entries from the records of the Municipal Court of Waterville, it appearing that no more extended record had been made in the case, to wit:—“State v. Wallace Simpson. Larceny. Complainant, A. L. McFadden. Date Dec. 30, 1895. Same day, prisoner arraigned. Plea, guilty. Sentenced to be imprisoned fifteen days in jail at hard labor and to pay the costs of prosecution $6.69. In default of payment of costs, fifteen days additional imprisonment. Committed.” Aside from proof of the respondent’s identity, no other
But at the close of the charge of the presiding judge, the defendant’s counsel requested an instruction that it was incumbent on the government to show what the complaint was in the Municipal Court upon which the conviction was based, and that there was not sufficient evidence in the case to support the allegation of a prior conviction. The presiding judge refused to give this instruction, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty. The case comes to this court on exceptions' to this refusal to give the requested instruction.
It is settled law in this state that, when the record in a case has not been fully extended, the docket entries may be read to the jury in support of the allegation of a former conviction. The docket is deemed to be the record until a more extended record is made, and the same rules of imported verity apply to the docket entries as to the completed record. State v. Neagle, 65 Maine, 469, and cases cited; State v. Hines, 68 Maine, 202.
But this rule of evidence is not decisive of the question here presented. Such docket entries from the records of a superior court of general jurisdiction are undoubtedly accepted as sufficient proof of a legal conviction without further evidence that the court had jurisdiction of the particular offense of which the respondent was convicted. Such a court is presumed to have jurisdiction to give the judgment it renders until the contrary appears. All intendments of law in such cases are in favor of its acts. But a different rule prevails in regard to inferior courts of special and limited authority. “As to them there is no presumption of law in favor of their jurisdiction; that must affirmatively appear by sufficient evidence or proper averment in the record, or their judgment will be deemed void on their face.” Galvin v. Page, 18 Wall. 364. “The acts of these two classes of courts,” says Mr. Freeman, “have been properly likened to the acts of general agents and the acts of special agents. The former are to be regarded as valid in all cases to the extent that all persons relying upon them need show nothing beyond the general grant of authority, while the latter to be bind
The Municipal Court of Waterville is an inferior court of limited statutory jurisdiction. It appears from the act-establishing that court (Chap. 220, Spec. Laws of 1880) that the judge has “jurisdiction in all cases of simple larceny where the property alleged to have been stolen shall not exceed in value the sum of twenty dollars, and power to award sentence upon conviction by fine not exceeding twenty dollars, or imprisonment in the county jail, with or without labor, for a term not exceeding ninety days.” But in 1891 it was extended to cases where the value of the property shall not exceed fifty dollars. • The act declares, it is true, that it “shall be a court of record and have a seal,” but it is not thereby elevated to the grade of those superior courts that are entitled to the benefit of the presumption omnia rite acta respecting jurisdiction. It must be admitted that there is no clearly defined test by which to determine in all cases whether a court belongs to the one class or the other, but as stated in Smith’s Lead. Cases, supra, “if the court is one possessing common law or equity powers, even though conferred by statute, the court will be one of general and superior jurisdiction, and its judgment will be supported by the presumption attending the judgments of superior courts..... If on the other hand, the court is one of limited or limited statutory jurisdiction, the court will be regarded as an inferior one and the effect of its judgments will be limited in certain respects..... The tendency of modern decisions seems to be toward doing away with the distinctions pointed out; but, for the present, the distinctions seem to be too well grounded in the cases to be successfully attacked.”
In the absence of prima facie evidence that the court had jurisdiction of the offense charged, the docket entries are not sufficient to establish the former conviction alleged in the indictment.
Exceptions sustained.