110 So. 595 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1926
The question is solely as to whether defendant has been tried by due process of law. Acts of the General Assembly 1898-99, page 1164, establishes an inferior criminal court in Mobile county, with jurisdiction similar, though somewhat enlarged, to that of the justice of the peace courts. This Act of 1900-01, p. 2575, amends the prior act, adding certain jurisdiction and powers therein enumerated, and further providing:
"The general laws of the state regulating the practice, proceedings, and process of the courts of justices of the peace of Mobile county shall be applicable to said court."
This proceeding was begun by affidavit before the clerk of the inferior court charging the offense, upon which was issued a warrant of arrest, returnable to said court. When the case was called for trial, the defendant declined to be tried in the inferior court, but demanded a jury trial. Thereupon the defendant entered into bond conditioned for his appearance at the next session of the circuit court of Mobile county, as is required by section 3854 of the Code of 1923. This bond, together with the proceedings in the inferior court, was certified to the circuit court, and upon this process defendant was tried and convicted. There was no objection raised to the process in the trial court.
The bond, executed by defendant on his demand for a jury trial, transferring the cause to the circuit court, is authorized by section 3854 of the Code. Jurisdiction of the offense is given circuit courts by section 3799 of the Code of 1923, and the execution of the bond, specified in section 3854, supra, is the "due process" necessary to a transfer of the case from the justice court to the circuit court. The filing of the bond in the circuit court effectually transferred this cause from the inferior court of Mobile county to the circuit court. State ex rel. Attorney General, Ex parte (McLasky v. State)
"No person shall be accused or arrested, or detained, except in cases ascertained by law, and according to the form which the same has prescribed."
The charge here is an indictable offense, within the meaning of section 8 of the Bill of Rights, and, unless express authority has been conferred upon the circuit court by the Legislature to try this cause without an indictment by a grand jury, section 8 of the Constitution forbids the circuit court to proceed, until the cause had been investigated by its grand jury and indictment returned into open court. No such authority appears to us to have been given. Section 3854, supra, transfers the case, but does that section authorize a trial involving defendant's liberty on such process? Is it an accusation according to the form which has been prescribed? The cases of Alfred v. State,
"Indictment, then, is the only legal mode of proceeding, in such a case as this, in the circuit court. That court cannot proceed to apply the law in any other manner."
With this construction placed upon it, this statute was brought forward in all subsequent Codes, until the Code of 1923, which, for obvious reasons, omits it. In passing upon a similar proceeding from a justice of the peace court, the Supreme Court draws no distinction, but holds the circuit court without authority to try without indictment. Jones v. State,
Such has been the practice in the courts of this state for more than 50 years. Originally, the statute was designed to transfer, to the general inquisitorial body of the county, such misdemeanor cases as were begun by malice, prejudice, or other improper motives, or were of such frivolous character as not to warrant prosecution and while, as has been seen, there are some instances where the Legislature by specific act has changed the procedure, the general policy of the state remains the same in prosecutions begun before justice of the peace court, and we are not willing to read into a statute an inferential power overturning this general policy, unless it plainly appears.
There is no such process appearing in this record as will support the judgment of conviction. Hawkins v. State,
For the reasons hereinabove set forth, this judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.