164 N.E. 359 | Ohio | 1928
This cause was filed in this court on June 23, 1928. Three separate proceedings were begun on that date, to wit., a motion for leave to file petition in error, a motion to certify the record, and the filing a petition in error as of right, alleging constitutional grounds of error. The motion to certify and the motion for leave to file petition in error are overruled.
A motion has been filed to dismiss the petition in error on the ground that there is no debatable constitutional question involved. The petition in error sets forth three assignments of error. We are, however, only concerned with the assignments purporting to raise constitutional questions, as follows:
(a) Plaintiff in error was denied a jury trial, in violation of Article
(b) The mayor of Oak Hill, Ohio, was without jurisdiction to try plaintiff in error, and his purported exercise of jurisdiction deprived plaintiff in error of liberty and property in violation of Article XIV, Section 1, of the Constitution of the United States.
(c) General Code, Section 6212-18, violates Section 1 of the
(d) General Code, Sections 1746, 4550, 3019, 6212-15, 6212-17, 6212-18, 6212-19, 6212-37, and other sections affecting the trial of liquor cases before mayors, violate Section 1 of the
This cause was first tried before the mayor of the village of Oak Hill in Jackson county, Ohio, on March 5, 1926. At the opening of the trial, the following colloquy occurred between court and counsel.
By Mr. McGhee: We demand a jury trial, as guaranteed by the Constitution of Ohio and the Constitution of the United States.
By the Court: The law says there will be no jury trial in this kind of a case.
By Mr. McGhee: We have a right to save the question.
By the Court: That's all right. Motion overruled.
Thereupon the trial proceeded in the usual way, without further objection and without any objection having been at any time made in the mayor's court to his jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause. The defendant was found guilty and a fine imposed, and thereupon error was prosecuted to the court of common pleas of Jackson county. The petition in error in the court of common pleas alleged the usual assignments of error relating to the admission and rejection of evidence, the weight of the evidence, and the sufficiency of the complaint, and the following assignment:
"The court erred in refusing to grant unto the defendant below the right of trial by jury, demanded by the defendant and guaranteed to him by the Constitution of the United States and the state of Ohio, to which ruling of the court in refusing to grant the defendant below a jury trial, the defendant at the time excepted."
No objection was at any time made in the court of common pleas to the jurisdiction of the mayor over *352 the cause or his right to hear and determine it. The court of common pleas affirmed the judgment of the mayor. Thereupon error was prosecuted to the Court of Appeals of Jackson county, and the cause was docketed in that court November, 1926. The petition in error filed in the Court of Appeals was practically identical with that filed in the court of common pleas, and did not challenge the jurisdiction of the mayor or urge any question of due process of law. At a later date, on March 16, 1927, the cause was orally argued in the Court of Appeals, and the question of the jurisdiction of the mayor's court was raised for the first time. The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgments of the mayor and of the court of common pleas.
Any question reaching to the jurisdiction of the trial court over the subject-matter of the action need not be raised in the trial court, but could be urged at any step of the proceedings through courts of review, but it is apparent that we are not dealing with any such question in the instant case. It is equally well settled by the case Tumey v. State of Ohio,
Questions of due process arising under the Fourteenth Federal Amendment should have their final solution in the Supreme Court of the United States, and we therefore point out some of the cases which have held that the right of trial by jury is not a necessary requisite of due process of law. Montana Co. v. St.Louis Mining Milling Co.,
This proposition is very concisely stated by Mr. Justice White in Iowa Central Ry. Co. v. Iowa,
"It was not a denial of a right protected by the Constitution of the United States to refuse a jury *354 trial, even though it were clearly erroneous to construe the laws of the State as justifying the refusal."
Mr. Justice White cites Brooks v. Missouri,
"Others of the exceptions taken at the trial relate to rulings by means of which, it is claimed, the defendant was deprived of an impartial jury; but it does not appear to have been claimed that any provision of the Constitution of the United States guaranteed to him such a jury. That the Sixth Article of the Amendments contains no such guaranty as to trials in the state courts has always been held."
In Spies v. Illinois, Mr. Chief Justice Waite again wrote the opinion, and at page 168 of 123 U.S. (
"The complaint is that the trial court, acting under this statute and in accordance with its requirements, compelled the petitioners against their will to submit to a trial by a jury that was not impartial, and thus deprived them of one of the fundamental rights which they had as citizens of the United States under the National Constitution, and if the sentence of the court is carried into execution they will be deprived of their lives without due process of law."
He then cited and quoted from numerous authorities, and reached the conclusion that no federal question was presented. The language of the court is equally cogent in the case ofMaxwell v. Dow, *355
"Trial by jury has never been affirmed to be a necessary requisite of due process."
At page 596 (
It is apparent that the cases in 123 and 124 U.S. Reports must be decisive of the instant case on the question of the right of trial by jury reaching to the due process provisions of the Fourteenth Federal Amendment. To deny an impartial jury would be quite as serious as to deny the right of trial by jury altogether.
Inasmuch as counsel are not now insisting upon the refusal of the right of jury trial as a ground of want of due process, and inasmuch as we are not predicating our judgment upon that question, nothing further need be said on that point.
It is particularly stated by counsel for plaintiff in error that they desire a review of the principles decided by this court in the case of Tari v. State,
All of the foregoing cases were decided by state courts. The Supreme Court of the United States has, however, declared the same principle in unmistakable language. In Brooks v. Missouri,supra, Chief Justice Waite wrote the opinion. From the syllabus we quote:
"Applying to this case the rules stated in Spies v. Illinois,
Inasmuch as the invalidity of statutes was not brought in question in either the mayor's court or court of common pleas, this court is not called upon under the authorities above quoted to again review the arguments set forth in the case ofTari v. State, supra, asserting their constitutionality.
It may again, however, be stated in passing that, since the decision of the Tari case, the courts of other states have had occasion to review the same principles which were discussed in the Tari case.
In the argument in the Tari case in this court, counsel for the accused presented as an authority the case of Ex parte Baer
(D.C.),
"So far as the record before this court shows, no objection was made by the defendant to the trial before the county judge."
The refusal was more particularly predicated, however, upon Meeks having a right to appeal from *358 the judgment of the county judge to the state circuit court, in which court trial de novo would have been had, with a further right of appeal to the Court of Appeals and possible application for a writ of prohibition. This case is cited at this time to show that the federal District Courts of the District of Kentucky are not in harmony upon the proposition that the judgment of the trial court was a nullity. The conclusion reached in the Meeks case, that he could have appealed to the state circuit court for trial de novo, and the denial of the writ on that ground, could only be upon the theory that the trial court had jurisdiction to entertain the cause, as otherwise its judgment would have been void and therefore not subject to appeal. It would seem to be an anomalous situation that a cause could be begun in a court having no jurisdiction and from such court appealed to a court having conceded jurisdiction.
If we are correct in this last proposition, then two other cases may be cited in support of the same position. InHill v. State,
"Where defendant in prosecution in justice court for violating game laws failed to object to trial before justice of the peace, under Constitution 1890, Section 171, on ground that he was interested in outcome of prosecution in that his compensation depended on conviction, either before the trial or any time before the justice of the peace lost control of the judgment, defendant is in the attitude of having consented thereto and to have waived alleged disqualification."
The Bryant case has been followed by the Supreme Court of Mississippi in two other cases. Boyd v. State, 114 So. 353, and Fleming v. City of Greenwood,
Summing up the situation in the instant case, there was no objection to the jurisdiction of the mayor, and there was no specific objection of any kind to the mayor presiding, and no suggestion of his disqualification. It does not anywhere appear in *360 this record that the mayor was on a fee basis or that his compensation depended upon a conviction. The record does not anywhere challenge the validity of any statute. The petition must therefore be dismissed on the sole ground that the demand and refusal to impanel a jury was not error, because a jury trial is not guaranteed in this class of cases by either the State or Federal Constitution.
Petition in error dismissed.
DAY, ALLEN, KINKADE and MATTHIAS, JJ., concur.