131 Iowa 492 | Iowa | 1906
As under the mulct law keeping open on election day was prohibited, and doing so would result in removing the bar and render the keeper liable to the infliction of a statutory penalty much in excess of that provided by the ordinance, the ordinance was held inconsistent with the statute. The case does not purport to overrule Bloomfield v. Trimble, supra, but to distinguish it, and the sentence, “Surely, then, an ordinance covering a subject already fully covered by an act of the Legislature is in conflit therewith,” should be construed in connection with the previous discussion. In Incorporated Town of Sibley v. Lastrico, 122 Iowa, 211, the ordinance was upheld on the ground that punishment for allowing a dog to run at large had not been fixed by statute, but was impliedly authorized to- be provided by ordinance. In Incorporated Town of Avoca v. Heller, 129 Iowa, 227, the ordinance prohibited any person from beating, striking, or fighting another within the corporate limits, and this was held to have been authorized by the statute conferring certain powers upon the municipality, and not to be inconsistent
The arguments against such implications are that the criminal laws of the state should be uniform in the elements that make up the defense, the penalties denounced, and in the form and procedure to prosecute; that it is the province of the Legislature alone to declare what shall constitute a crime and prescribe the punishment thereof; that the offense against the criminal laws of the state is the same offense, in whatever locality committed, and should subject the offender to the same punishment; and that the attempt to exercise such powers by the municipality might impair the administration of criminal justice. But none of these considerations are fundamental and, as experience has demonstrated, none are of controlling importance. The central thought throughout is that the statute and ordinance create the same offense. But this is not so. Municipal corporations “ are bodies politic and corporations vested with political and legislative powers for local civil government and police regulations of the inhabitants of particular districts included in the boundaries of the corporations.” They are in many respects local governments established to aid the government by the state.
The object of such an ordinance is not to punish an
That there is no impropriety, from a constitutional standpoint, in clothing our municipal governments with legislative power to prohibit and punish by ordinance any act made penal by the State laws, when perpetrated within municipal limits, and that it is no objection to such an ordinance that it prescribes the same penalties as the State law for the. commission or omission of the same act, and that the offender may be tried and punished for the same act under both the ordinance and the State law, and that a conviction or acquittal under the one is no bar to the prosecution under the other, and that it is no objection to the municipal ordinance that the trial thereunder is without a jury. In avoidance of the theory that such a status of the law subjects the offender to the constitutionally ° inhibited' second jeopardy and punishment for the same offense, the question is assimilated to the dual trials and punishments, the one in the federal courts, the other in the State tribunals, that follow the same act when it infracts both a State law and congressional legislation. Instead of its resulting in two trials and punishments for the same offense within the contemplation of the constitutional inhibition, it is regarded as two distinct offenses growing out of the. same act; the one being a transgression of the State law, and the other an infraction of the municipal law. A crime
The principle that an act may constitute two offenses, one against the state and the other against a city or town, and that conviction of one may not be pleaded as constituting former jeopardy, as well as that authority to enact an ordinance with reference thereto is included in the general powers conferred on cities and towns by statute, seems to have the support of most of the cases and text-writers and is sound. Town of Van Buren v. Wells, 53 Ark. 368 (14 S. W. 38, 22 Am. St. Rep. 214); State v. Fourcade, 45 La. Ann. 717, (13 South. 187, 40 Am. St. Rep. 249); McInerney v. City of Denver, 17 Colo. 302 (29 Pac. 516); Hughes v. People, 8 Colo. 536 (9 Pac. 50); Shafer v. Mumma, 17 Md. 331 (79 Am. Dec. 565); State v. Oleson, 26 Minn. 507 (5 N. W. 959); City of Brownville v. Cook, 4 Neb. 101; State v. Bergman, 6 Or. 341; State v. Williams, 11 S. C. 288; Bishop on Statutory Crimes (1st Ed.) section 23; State v. City of Topeka, 36 Kan. 76 (12 Pac. 310, 59 Am. Rep. 529); Greenwood v. State, 6 Baxt. (Tenn.) 567 (32 Am. Rep. 539); Johnson v. State, 59 Miss. 543; Wragg v. Penn Tp., 94 Ill. 11 (34 Am. Rep. 199); City of St. Louis v. Cafferata, 24 Mo. 96; (17 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 252; Theisen v. McDavid, 34 Fla. 440 (16 South.
III. Section 680. of the Code confers on cities and towns the power to enact u ordinances not inconsistent with the laws of the state, for carrying into effect or discharging .the power and duties conferred by this chapter, and such as shall be necessary and proper to provide for the safety, preserve the health, improve the morals, order and comfort— of such corporation and the -inhabitants thereof.” That the acts prohibited by the ordinance were inimical to good order and degrading to morals is too much manifest for discussion. The prompt suppression of affrays, assaults and battries, and other kindred offenses, and the punishment of the offender, is certainly requisite to the maintenance of good order in a city or town, and ordinarily may be accomplished with greater efficiency in the municipal courts, without the intervention of juries, than by prosecution under the statutes of the state. It follows that the court errored in directing the acquittal of the accused.
Reversed, but not remanded.