254 N.E.2d 375 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1969
These are appeals on questions of law from the Huron County Common Pleas Court wherein convictions in the mayor's court of Monroeville were sustained. Defendant, Clarence Ward, was charged with violating Sections 2 and 29, Ordinance 47-12 of the village of Monroeville, in that he failed to comply with a lawful order of a police officer and failed to produce a driver's license on request of the police officer. Defendant moved to dismiss the charges or in the alternative to certify the cases to a proper court on the ground that the mayor before whom the cause was to be tried in Monroeville could not sit as a disinterested and impartial tribunal.
During the oral argument before this Court of Appeals, the court inquired whether the amendment of Section
Section 4 (B), Article IV, as amended, is set forth below:
"(B) the courts of common pleas shall have such original jurisdiction over all justiciable matters and such powers of review of proceedings of administrative officers and agencies as may be provided by law."
The section prior to amendment read as follows:
"The jurisdiction of the Courts of Common Pleas, and of the Judges thereof shall be fixed by law."
The case of Stone v. Goolsby (Common Pleas, Franklin County, 1969),
Both the plaintiff and the defendant in the Monroeville case
came to the conclusion that Stone v. Goolsby,
The language of the condensed text of the "Modern Courts Amendment," which appeared on the ballot on May 7, 1968, is as follows:
"Shall the Constitution of the state of Ohio be amended by amending Sections 1 and 2, enacting Sections 3, 4, 5 and 6 and repealing existing Sections 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12 and 14 of Article IV and by repealing Sections 12 and 13 of Article XI as adopted in 1851 to provide that the Supreme Court shall decide all cases by majority vote, to fix the power of the Supreme Court of Ohio to exercise administrative supervision over all courts and to make rules of practice and procedure, to prohibit the election or appointment to any judicial office of a person who shall have passed *20 the age of 70 years, to equalize judges' salaries and to allow increases in compensation during term, to remove the Probate Court as a constitutional court and to authorize the consolidation of county Probate Courts and Courts of Common Pleas?"
Defendant argues in support of reason number (1) that the ballot summary failed to give the voters information as to the alleged changes affecting the right of appeal from inferior courts to the Common Pleas Courts and, therefore, cannot be said to have been adopted by the electorate. Euclid v. Heaton (1968),
A review of the legislative history of the Act would indicate that originally all courts were to be combined in a single Common Pleas Court. Opponents of the unified Common Pleas Court plan succeeded in eliminating this feature from the "Modern Courts Amendment." However, Section 4 (B), Article IV, was not redrafted. Defendant alleges that this inadvertence was corrected, however, by the fact that the unintended consequences thereof were not presented to the voters and, hence, not adopted.
In support of the second reason defendant argues that ifStone v. Goolsby,
The third reason of defendant's triad is that Section 4 (B), Article IV, need not be construed to deprive the General Assembly of power to confer appellate jurisdiction upon the Common Pleas Court. Defendant contends *21
the following: (1), the state Constitution, unlike the federal Constitution, is a limitation of power rather than a grant of power and (2) plenary legislative power is vested in the General Assembly by Section
In reference to point number (1), the ballot summary, there is no specific requirement as to what the summary must contain so long as the condensed text properly describes the question, issue or amendment. See State, ex rel. Foreman, v. Brown,
To hold that there is no right of appeal from a mayor's court would require the finding that Sections
"* * * It follows that the General Assembly may pass any law unless it is specifically prohibited by the state or federal Constitutions. * * *"
The court, at page 162, quotes from State, ex rel., v. Jones,Auditor,
"`* * * whatever limitation is placed upon the exercise ofthat plenary grant of power must be found in a clear prohibitionby the Constitution. The legislative power will generally be deemed ample to authorize enactment of a law, unless the legislative discretion has been qualified or restricted by the constitution in reference to the subject matter in question. If the constitutionality of the law is involved in doubt, that doubt must be resolved in favor of the legislative power. * * *'"
Discussing the doctrine of expressio unius est exclusioalterius the court stated that since the legislative power of the General Assembly is plenary the judiciary must proceed with much caution in applying the above maxim to invalidate legislation. It also observed that the maxim expressio unius est exclusioalterius is not a rule of law but rather a rule of construction. The purpose is to cut through ambiguities to lay bare the intendment of a provision. When contrary fact and circumstances are known, the rule does not apply. In the instant case it is apparent that the facts and circumstances are known from a study of the proceedings of the Modern Courts Committee of *23 the Ohio State Bar Association; and, further, more than one section of the Constitution is under consideration.
The appeal provisions of the mayor's court are found in that section of the Code creating the court. The constitutional fountainhead is Section 1, Article IV, which is as follows:
"The judicial power of the state is vested in a supreme court, courts of appeal, courts of common pleas, and such other courts inferior to the supreme court as may from time to time be established by law."
That section was also adopted at the same time as Section 4 (B), Article IV. These sections must be read in pari materia.
The General Assembly is clearly granted the power to create courts inferior to the Supreme Court. There is no limitation here on the General Assembly. The power to create a court carries with it the power to determine its jurisdiction and provide for its maintenance. State, ex rel. Ramey, v. Davis,
"The constitution itself confers no jurisdiction whatever upon the court either in civil or criminal cases. It is given a capacity to receive jurisdiction in all such cases, but it can exercise none until `fixed by law.'"
Under Section 1, Article IV, the General Assembly may provide for the review of proceedings of inferior courts, which it has the power to create, unless there is a "clear prohibition by the Constitution." See the Jackman case, supra, page 162 (of
In Price v. McCoy Sales Service, Inc.,
"Appellate procedure is a branch of the law where simplicity,clarity and consistency are especially important." *24
We also note the admonition of Chief Justice Weygandt inYoungstown Municipal Ry. Co., v. Youngstown,
"To so construe the amendment would imply an intention on the part of its proponents to precipitate chaos in the appellate courts of this state at a time when there could be no relief therefrom unless the General Assembly might see fit to take action. There would be no possibility of taking a case from the trial court to either the Court of Appeals or this court. It seems highly improbable that so fantastic a result was intended; and a careful study of the amendment in its entirety, as there must be, so discloses. * * *"
We hold that there is no clear prohibition of the historical review by the Common Pleas Court of proceedings of a mayor's court, nor are the constitutional provisions, construed in parimateria, clearly incompatible with the statutes so providing.
To hold that there is no such right of appeal would necessitate the finding that since the mayor's court is not a court of record there would be no right of any appeal from that court. While an appeal is not a constitutional right, yet parties equally situated would be denied the equal protection of the law. A party accused of a similar violation and tried in a County Court or Municipal Court could appeal to an appellate court, but a defendant in a mayor's court would have no appeal except perhaps an illusory one to the Supreme Court of the United States. Thompson v. Louisville,
Defendant alleges error in that he was compelled to stand trial before a mayor who, by reason of his executive position and responsibilities, could not be a disinterested and impartial judicial officer.
Defendant relies primarily on the cases of Tumey v. Ohio,
Defendant argues that, although in the instant case the mayor does not receive the costs, his concern for the financial condition of his village which received the fines is inconsistent with judicial impartiality. The Dugan case held that the
Defendant endeavors to distinguish that case on the ground that the mayor in the Dugan case did not exercise executive power under the applicable commission form of government. Before applying the above cases, it is appropriate to point out that subsequent statutory amendments have placed severe limitations on the mayor's court. See Section
"* * * the mayor of such municipal corporation has jurisdiction to hear and determine any prosecution for the violation of an ordinance of the municipal corporation, and has jurisdiction in all criminal causes involving moving traffic violations occurring on state highways located within the boundaries of the municipal corporation, subject to the limitations of Sections
See, also, Section
"* * * It is, of course, so common to vest the mayor of villages with inferior judicial functions that the mere union of the executive power and the judicial power in him can not be said to violate due process of law. The minor penalties usually attaching to the ordinances of a village council, or to the misdemeanors in which the mayor may pronounce final judgment without a jury, do not involve any such addition to the revenue of the village as to justify the fear that the mayor would be influenced in his judicial judgment by that fact. The difference between such a case and the plan and operation of the statute before us is so plain as not to call for further elaboration."
Although in the instant case the revenue from the mayor's court was sizable, nevertheless, we think there was no violation of due process. If all mayor's courts are to be abolished, that is a decision for the General Assembly and not this court.
The assignment of error in this respect is not well taken.
Further, we find the branch of the assignment of error asserting that the mayor's executive responsibility impaired his judicial impartiality to pass upon the credibility of police witnesses is also not well taken.
The judgments of the Common Pleas Court of Huron County are affirmed and the causes are remanded to the Mayor's Court of Monroeville for execution of sentence.
Judgments affirmed.
BROWN, P. J., and STRAUB, J., concur. *27