36 Ala. 252 | Ala. | 1860
We do not inquire whether the allegations of the petition were in other respects sufficient.
We dt> not think that the 10th and 29th sections of the bill of rights, (Const. of Ala. art. 1, §§ 10, 29,) apply to proceedings before a mayor, for the violation of city ordinances. The 10th section declares, that “in all criminal prosecutions, the accused has the right to be heard by himself and counsel.” The common-law definition of a crime, as given by Blackstone, is, an act committed or omitted in violation of a public law, (4Blackst. Com. 3;) and the term “ criminal prosecutions,” as employed in the constitution, relates exclusively to prosecutions for violations of the public laws of the State. A city ordinance is not a public law of the State, but a local law of a particular corporation, made for its internal police, and' good government. Moreover, if municipal cases before
Nor are these proceedings for violations of city ordinances “ civil causes,” in the sense of the 29th section of the bill of rights, which declares, that “ no person shall be debarred from prosecuting or defending any civil cause, for or against him or herself, before any tribunal in this State, by him or herself or counsel.” The civil causes here spoken of are those which deal with private wrongs ; that is, with acts which constitute an infringement or privation of the private or civil rights belonging to individuals. These terms, thei’efore, include only those legal proceedings which seek redress for civil injuries. But city ordinances are punitive regulations; and the object of a proceeding for the violation of them, is not redress for a civil injury, but the punishment of an offender against the peace and good order of society. Hence, they are termed ^wasi-criminal proceedings. — See Brown v. Mayor of Mobile, 23 Ala. 722; Mayor of Mobile v. Rouse, 8 Ala. 515; Mayor v. Allaire, 14 Ala. 400. We must, therefore, look elsewhere for the right of counsel to appear on the trial of municipal cases before the mayor.
It is provided by the Code, that persons admitted to the supreme court, after the adoption of the Code, “may practice in all the courts in this State;” and those admit ted by any chancery or circuit court, “ may practice in any-court of the State, except the supreme court.” — Code, § 730. Is the court which the mayor of Mobile holds for the trial of offenders against the municipal laws of the city,;'“ a court in this State,” within the meaning of this section of the Code ? It would be an unwarrantable perversion of plain language to hold that it is not. According
The constitutional and statutory provisions securing to suitors and accused persons the right to the aid of counsel, and section 730 of -the Code, defining the courts in which attorneys have the right to practice, all relate, directly or indirectly, to the same subject-matter. Eor the right of a party to the aid of counsel, in any particular proceeding or court, would be a barren right, if there were no
We have already observed, that by the constitution, the right to be heard by himself and counsel, is secured to the accused in all “ criminal prosecutions.” — Const, art. 1, §10. These terms include every prosecution for a violation of the criminal laws of the State, in a court authorized to determine the question - of guilt or innocence by a judgment of acquittal or conviction, no matter how trifling the alleged offense, or how insignificant the punishment awarded. In like manner, the parties to the pettiest “ civil 'cause” that may be tried before a justice of the peace, or “ any tribunal in this State,” have a constitutional right to the aid of counsel. — (Const. art. 1, §29.) In all preliminary, inquiries before committing magistrates, no matter what the grade of the offense charged, the legislature has secured to the accused the right to the aid of counsel, although such an investigation is not, in a legal sense, a trial, which means an inquiry in which the guilt or innocence of the accused is finally passed upon. The committing magistrate exercises an authority judicial in its nature, but is not clothed with judicial,power. He has no authority to acquit or condemn. His action does not conclude either the State or the accused. He may discharge the defendant, and yet the grand jury may indict, and the petit jury convict him. He may bind the party over)1 but the grand jury can ignore the bill. Hence, it has been said, that a committing magistrate does not act as a court of justice, but only asan officer deputed by law to conduct a preliminary inquiry. — See Ex parte Gist, 26 Ala. 161-2; Cox v. Coleridge, 1 Barn. & Cress. 37, 50, 52-3-4.
A trial before a mayor, for a breach of city ordinances, may often involve much more serious consequences to
On the whole, our opinion is, that an attorney, who has been regularly admitted to practice in accordance with the provisions of the Code, has a legal right, when employed for that purpose, to appear as-counsel for persons on trial before the mayor of Mobile, for alleged violations of the city ordinances,
The right of such an attorney to appear as counsel for the accused, on a preliminary inquiry before the mayor as a committing magistrate, is also clear, though it stands upon a somewhat different footing. By the city charter, the mayor has the power “ to examine and commit, or discharge on bail, all persons charged with offenses not capital, in the same manner as justices of the peade.” Municipal Laws of Mobile, p. 16, § 33; Acts 1843-4, p. 181, § 16. The Code expressly provides, that on preliminary investigations before committing-magistrates, “the defendant may appear by counsel.” — Code, §3403. This section of the Code is as applicable when the preliminary inquiry is had before the mayor as a committing magistrate, as when it takes place before a justice of the peace, or a judge of the circuit court. — Code, § 3339. It would
One of the duties of attorneys, as these are defined by section 738 of the Code, is “to maintain the respect due to courts of justice and judicial officers;” and among the specified causes fot the removal or. suspension of an attor ney, is any willful violation of this duty. — See § 748'. But, until such removal or suspension has been effected 'by a judgment rendered in the circuit court, in a proceeding instituted for that purpose, no court in this State can law fully deny to a regularly licensed attorney the right to practice in causes tried before it, upon the ground that the attorney has, on some past occasion,'spoken disrespectfully of, or conducted himself in a manner offensive
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.