76 N.C. 33 | N.C. | 1877
The Constitution provides that the judicial power of the State shall be vested in a Court for the trial of Impeachments, a Supreme Court, Superior Courts, Courts of Justices of the Peace and Special Courts. Art. IV. § 4. It also declares that the General Assembly shall provide for the establishment of Special Courts for the trial of misdemeanors, in cities and towns, where they may be necessary. Art IV. § 19. Here then is an express power to create Special Courts for the trial of misdemeanors, in cities and towns, where they may be necessary; and the General Assembly is constituted the judge of the necessity, and when deemed to be necessary, is clothed with the power and duty of creating them. Accordingly, the Legislature of 1871-'2, by an Act, ch. 195, § 1, (see Pat. Rev. ch. 111, § 30,) did exercise the power by constituting the chief officers of all the incorporated cities and towns of the State, the officers to hold such Special Courts in their respective municipalities, and conferred upon them jurisdiction over misdemeanors committed within their corporation, to-wit: that of Justices of the Peace. Under the Constitution, both before and since it has been amended, these Special Courts can exercise no civil jurisdiction at all, and no criminal jurisdiction except over misdemeanors. It was not necessary for the Act creating, to designate them by name, asSpecial Courts, if the powers and duties imparted to them constituted them such. His Honor, therefore, erred in holding that the Act so establishing these Courts, is unconstitutional and void. Town of Edenton v. Wool et al.,
The true principle is that municipal by-laws and ordinances must be in harmony with the general laws of the State, and whenever they come in conflict with the general laws, the by-laws and ordinances must give way. The question does not arise, in our case, whether the State may not expressly confer upon a municipal corporation the power to pass local laws which shall exclude the general laws of the State on particular and enumerated subjects. By-laws and State laws may stand together, if not inconsistent, and possibly the same Act may constitute an offence both against the State and municipal law, and both may be punished if the by-law is strictly a police regulation only. Cooley on Const. Lim. 199.
In our case, the "Ordinance No. 21" comes in conflict with the general law, both as to the offence and the established jurisdiction of the Superior Court, and must go down before it. See State v. Threadgill, atthis term.
It is clear, beyond doubt, that as the Act of 1871-'72, has established Special Courts in cities and towns, as is authorized *37 by the Constitution as it was, and as it is now amended, (Art. IV. § 25) the General Assembly has the power to vest in these Courts, original and final jurisdiction over all misdemeanors whatever. Whether it would not be a most beneficial and economical jurisdiction, if extended to the Mayors of the principal and most populous cities and towns of the State, thus relieving the Superior Courts of a mass of business, which in some counties has engrossed the whole time of the regular terms of the Courts and been the subject of much complaint, is an inquiry which we cannot pursue. Some of the difficulties of construing the present Act, establishing these Special Courts, have been necessarily noticed in the course of this opinion. It is loosely worded and fails clearly to establish these Courts and to define the extent of their jurisdiction and powers and mode of procedure.
We are of opinion that the Intendant had no jurisdiction.
There is no error. This will be certified.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed. *38