DocketNumber: 4 Div. 373.
Citation Numbers: 118 So. 265, 218 Ala. 250, 1928 Ala. LEXIS 217
Judges: Thomas, Brown, Anderson, Sayre, Gardner, Boüldin, Somerville
Filed Date: 3/29/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
2. Had there been a "discontinuance" — a gap or chasm in the proceedings after the suit or prosecution was pending — the voluntary act of defendant, appearing without due objection and pleading "not guilty" in the circuit court, was a waiver of any right of discontinuance, if such existed. It is required of one to make due insistence and "take advantage of his rights," at the proper time, and a failure so to insist "will be considered a waiver." Ex parte Hall,
3. Under the provisions of the Constitution, the Legislature has the right to pass laws dispensing with a grand jury in case of misdemeanors. Const. § 8; Gaines v. State,
"To so enact was fully within the power of the Legislature. The present Constitution, different in this respect from the Constitutions prior to that of 1865 (Thomas v. State,
The proviso to section 8 of the Constitution of 1901 is the same, in respects here material, as that in section 9, art. 1, Const. of 1875, construed in the Witt Case. See, also, State v. Bush,
Since the Legislature could enact, as was done for Madison county, and sustained in Gaines v. State, supra, to the end that the clerk of the circuit court could issue an affidavit for misdemeanor returnable to and for trial in the circuit court, so may a justice of the peace, as was done in Pike county, be authorized to issue warrant for a misdemeanor, returnable to the law court for trial, and, after the abolition of that court, cases pending therein were made transferable to the circuit court. The jurisdiction of the circuit court was, therefore, properly sustained by the Court of Appeals, within the express provisions of special and general enactments of the Legislature, without doing violence to organic law. There was a provision of law for the initiation of the prosecution by affidavit, returnable to the law court of Pike county in Acts of 1888-89, p. 631, and after the abolition of such court for the transfer of pending causes to the circuit court. Gen. Acts 1915, p. 279.
In preparing the foregoing, it was thought unnecessary to do more than cite the cases of Witt v. State and Gaines v. State, supra, from this court, and those of Roseberry v. State and State v. Bush, supra, from the Court of Appeals, collecting and discussing the Constitution, statutes, and our cases. However, there is a conflict in our decisions, requiring a careful consideration of our cases that have a bearing on the question presented for decision. The cases cited by petitioner are:
Clark v. State,
"There is no constitutional restriction upon the legislative power to dispense with indictments in cases of misdemeanors."
And the statutes authorizing the trial of misdemeanors without a jury are adverted to in Baader v. State,
In Jones v. State,
The case of Lewis v. State,
In the case of Smith v. State,
"By the Constitution it is provided that in cases of misdemeanor the Legislature may by law dispense with a grand jury and authorize such prosecutions and proceedings before justices of the peace or such other inferior courts as may be by law established. * * *
"As was pointed out in Clark v. State,
"In this case the trial was had upon the original affidavit, importing thereby, as we apprehend, the adoption by the solicitor of the affidavit as the state's complaint."
Petitioner's counsel ask: How could the circuit court of Pike county proceed to trial of petitioner without violating his constitutional right, safeguarded under section 7 of the Constitution? The answer is that he was accused, arrested, and detained in a case or for an offense against the criminal laws of the state, established and promulgated prior to the offense, and legally applied according to the form which the law has prescribed, by the affidavit and warrant returnable to the Pike county law court, that of the abolition of said court and the due transfer to the circuit court of all pending causes.
This observation of section 7 of the Constitution makes necessary its consideration with sections 8, 139, 143, of the Constitution. In section 143 is the provision that the circuit court shall have original jurisdiction in all matters, civil and criminal, within the state not otherwise excepted in this Constitution. The like provision is contained in section 6676, Code, to the effect that the circuit court exercises "original jurisdiction of all felonies and misdemeanors." Phillips v. Morrow,
And in the exercise of this right the Legislature, as affecting Madison county, vested the "power of a judicial nature" to issue warrants in misdemeanors, etc., in the clerk of the circuit court. Since that act (Local Acts 1919, p. 17) misdemeanants have been tried and convicted in that county by the circuit court, upon warrants issued by its clerk, and without indictment by the grand jury. Gaines v. State,
In Chilton county, by Local Acts 1923, p. 64, the county court was abolished, provision made for the transfer of all pending causes to the circuit court, and that act further provided that misdemeanor cases may originate by affidavit before the clerk of the circuit court, returnable to the circuit court. This statute was sustained in Roseberry v. State,
Under the act of 1915 (Local Acts 1915, p. 134) the judge of the inferior court of Bessemer was authorized to issue affidavits in certain misdemeanors, returnable to the circuit court of that division of said court, and there try on that authority and process without indictment. The same has been approved by the appellate court. Reese v. State,
The provisions of section 4646, Code of 1923, codified from the prohibition law of 1909 (Acts 1909, p. 92, § 32), and Acts 1915, pp. 8, 32, for prosecutions by affidavit, as well as by indictment, in prohibition cases, are:
"All prosecutions for a violation of any provision of this chapter, or of any other law, for the suppression of the evils of intemperance, may be begun by affidavit as well as by indictment and when begun by affidavit, the person charged shall not have the right to demand that a grand jury prefer an indictment for the alleged offense, except where such offense is a felony, but the prosecution may continue no matter in what court or before what judge the trial shall be had upon the affidavit upon which it was originally begun."
It is upon such a statute (Fuller Bill, Gen. and Local Acts, Sp. Sess. 1909, p. 63, § 32) that in Alford v. State ex rel. Attorney Gen.,
As we have stated, the instant petitioner was proceeded against by affidavit, for the offense of violating the prohibition law, issued by the justice of the peace, and returnable before that officer, and there was also a formal complaint in that court to like effect; thereafter a warrant of arrest was issued thereon by the clerk of the circuit court, after abolition of the former court and transfer by law of this and all other pending causes to the circuit court, as a pending cause within the abolition statute. The defendant was given the right to a trial by the petit jury in the circuit court, returning the verdict of guilty against him, on which judgment was rendered and the appeal is prosecuted therefrom. If he had been tried in the Pike county law court, and appealed to the circuit court, he could have secured only a trial de novo; and this he had by a petit jury finding him guilty. State ex rel. Sellers v. Murphy,
The provisions of section 8 of the Constitution of 1901 come to us, in respects here material, from article 1, § 9, of the Constitution of 1875. The latter provision of organic law was defined as to the use of the word "misdemeanor" in Witt v. State (1900)
The expressions in Lee v. State (1904)
Following such construction of section 8 of the Constitution as to misdemeanors, many statutes have been passed, as we have indicated, making process by affidavit, for misdemeanors, returnable and triable in the circuit court without the intervention of a grand jury. It is immaterial whether the issuing officer is the judge of an inferior court, a justice of the peace, or a clerk of the circuit court; the principle announced in Witt's Case has application. It is sufficient that the official is a person duly invested with the power by the Legislature under section 139 of the Constitution, as "such (a) person as may be by law invested with powers of a judicial nature," and that the defendant had his right to trial by a petit jury. See Gaines v. State,
The writ of certiorari is denied, and the application for rehearing is overruled.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE, GARDNER, and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.
Mathias v. State , 21 Ala. App. 685 ( 1926 )
Daniel v. State , 20 Ala. App. 677 ( 1925 )
Walker v. State , 17 Ala. App. 3 ( 1919 )
Roseberry v. State , 20 Ala. App. 450 ( 1924 )
Baader v. State , 201 Ala. 76 ( 1917 )
Ex Parte Pruitt , 207 Ala. 261 ( 1922 )
State Ex Rel. Sellers v. Murphy , 207 Ala. 290 ( 1922 )
Ex Parte Roseberry , 212 Ala. 689 ( 1925 )
Phillips v. Morrow , 213 Ala. 139 ( 1924 )
Gaines v. State , 215 Ala. 361 ( 1926 )
Jones v. State , 16 Ala. App. 477 ( 1918 )
Reese v. State , 16 Ala. App. 430 ( 1918 )
Snyder v. State , 18 Ala. App. 188 ( 1921 )
Roszell v. State , 19 Ala. App. 462 ( 1923 )
Fason v. State , 19 Ala. App. 533 ( 1924 )
Roseberry v. State , 20 Ala. App. 560 ( 1925 )