77 Ind. 428 | Ind. | 1881
The complaint of the State, the plaintiff below, alleges that an affidavit was filed before N. P. Eerry, a justice of the peace of Noble township, Wabash county, charging one Christopher Wenzel with perjury; that, upon the filing of the affidavit, the justice issued a warrant for the arrest of said Christopher Wenzel, which was placed in the hands of the sheriff of said county as a special constable; •that the said officer did arrest said Wenzel, and did bring him before the justice by whom the warrant was issued, on the 6th day of March, 1880; that the case was called for trial, and the said Wenzel, being present in person, did waive a preliminary examination, whereupon the justice required him to enter into a recognizance for his appearance at the next term of the Wabash Circuit Court; that the said Wenzel failed to give such recognizance, and was committed te jail; that on the 15th day of March, 1880, said Christopher Wenzel was brought into the Wabash Circuit Court, and that he and the appellee, Jacob Wenzel, did, in open court, enter into a recognizance for the appearance of the former at the next term of said court, and that default was made and forfeiture declared.
The answer of appellee, omitting merely formal parts, is as follows: “That his co-defendant, the said Christopher, was never in the legal custody of the court upon the charge of perjury; that the arrest of the said Christopher, made by the said Asa S. Ross, was wholly illegal and unwarranted, in this, to wit, that the said Asa S. Ross was not, at the time of the arrest of the said Christopher, a constable of Wabash county, and that when, said justice, N. P. Eerry, issued his warrant for the arrest of said Christopher, and placed the same in the hands of said Ross, he did not, as the statute requires, direct it, the said warrant, in name to the said Ross. A copy of said warrant is filed herewith and made a part of this answer, and marked ‘Exhibit A.’ And the defendant says that the said warrant so issued by
Appellant demurred to this answer, and here alleges error upon the action of the court in overruling the demurrer.
The facts stated in the answer must determine its sufficiency. Mere general conclusions can not have a controlling effect where facts are specifically stated. The general averment must yield to the particular facts stated as the ground of defence. Neidefer v. Chastain, 71 Ind. 363 ; Reynolds v. Copeland, 71 Ind. 422; Richardson v. Snider, 72 Ind. 425; Woollen v. Whitacre, 73 Ind. 198; Jackson School Tp. v. Farlow, 75 Ind. 118 ; Stack v. Beach, 74 Ind. 571.
The warrant and return are no part of the answer. Instruments which are not the foundation of a pleading should not be made exhibits. The rules of good pleading are violated in every case where this is done.. The practice has been again and again censured by this court.
The appellee’s position is, that the Wabash Circuit Court had no jurisdiction of the pei’son of Christopher Wenzel, and that the recogixizance is therefore void. Valid recognizances are such as are taken by courts of competent jurisdiction. A recognizance taken in a case where there is xio jurisdiction can not be enforced. Thus far the law is plain. The questioxx ixx this case is, Did the Wabash Circuit Court have jurisdiction at the time the recognizance in suit was entered ixxto ? There caix be xxo fair debate upon the question as to the general jurisdictioxx of that court over the subject-matter of felonies and recogxxizances. That it does possess such jurisdictioxx'can not be doubted. Whether it possessed jurisdictioxx of the pex'son of Christopher Wenzel, is the debatable questioxx. Appellee, in support of his contention that the Wabash Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction of Wenzel, assigxxs these reasons;
*431 1. That, as the warrant is addressed to “any constable of Wabash county, greeting,” the sheriff had no authority to arrest upon a warrant so issued and addressed;
2. That the warrant was void, because not addressed to Ross by name.
The first of these reasons is very easily disposed of. The answer does not aver that the warrant was so addressed. The exhibit filed with the answer neither helps nor harms ; it simply has nothing at all to do with the pleading. The presumption upon this point is therefore against the appellee ; for, until the contrary appears, public officers are presumed to have done their duty.
The second of the reasons urged by the appellee requires consideration. It is shown that Ross was -not a constable, and the State concedes that, as sheriff, he could not serve warrants issued by justices, unless he was authorized as a special constable. Section 110 of the justices’ act requires, that, when a special constable is appointed, the process shall .be issued to him by name. The requirement of the statute is imperative. The process will not protect the person assuming to act as special constable, unless addressed to him as the statute requires. Benninghoof v. Finney, 22 Ind. 101; Dietrichs v. Schaw, 43 Ind. 175. The warrant upon which Christopher Wenzel was arrested did not justify Ross in arresting him ; nor did such arrest confer jurisdiction upon the examining magistrate. A justice of the peace can not" acquire jurisdiction of a person accused of crime upon an illegal arrest made under color of a void warrant.
Counsel for the State argue with much force and ingenuity, that the circuit court had a right-to take the recognizance, even though the accused person was improperly brought before it. The theory of counsel is, as we understand it, that the circuit court is one of superior jurisdiction, having general authority to let to bail; and that it is not bound to inquire, in the absence of objections on the
The case first brought to our notice is that of Blackman v. The State, 12 Ind. 556. It was there held that a sheriff has no authority merely because he is a sheriff to take a recognizance ; that he has such authority only in cases where the accused is in his custody on legal process. That case can, it is obvious, have no application to such a case as the present, where the recognizance was taken by a court of general jurisdiction. The next case requiring notice is that of Hawkins v. The State, 24 Ind. 288, where it was held, that, as the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace is a special statutory one, facts must be averred showing that he had authority to take the recognizance, and this holding is approved in Gachenheimer v. The State, 28 Ind. 91, and in The State v. Gachenheimer, 30 Ind. 63. In these cases stress is laid upon the character of the court by which the recognizance was taken, and the decisions are controlled by that consideration. In the last of these cases the court said: “Indeed, we regarded it as too familiar a proposition to justify discussion, that the proceedings of a court of inferior and limited jurisdiction can not be recognized as valid, unless the facts necessary to give jurisdiction in the particular case are affirmatively shown to exist, and that a recognizance, a debt of record, taken by a
There is another important element in this case. The accused voluntarily and without objection entered into the recognizance which the State seeks to enforce. It is a general principle, running through all our cases, that a party must object at the time an act is done or a ruling made by the court. This principle has been applied in cases where a party sought a reversal of a judgment sentencing him to
There is still another phase of the case. The accused
In speaking of a recognizance, the Supreme Court of Illinois said : “We understand the law to be well settled, that the record imports absolute verity, and no averment can be taken against it. For this reason the pleas were bad, and the demurrer properly sustained. Stephen’s Plead., p. 158; The People v. Watkins, 19 Ill. 118 ; Johnson v. The People, 31 Ill. 472.” Welborn v. The People, 76 Ill. 516.
There are, in many respects, essential differences between the judgments of courts of inferior and those of general superior jurisdiction. It is the general rule, as we have already intimated, that jurisdiction must, in cases of judgments of the former tribunals, appear upon the record ; but whether this rule extends to cases where an accused, without objection, enters into a recognizance required of him by the justice of the peace, where he is personally in court and has full opportunity of freely objecting, we need not, and do not, decide. The record does not present this question; for the recognizance here sought to be enforced was entered into during the open session of a court possessing the highest original jurisdiction of criminal offences.
Judgment reversed.