Commonwealth v. Griffin

42 Ky. 208, 3 B. Mon. 208, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 20, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 Ky. 208 (Commonwealth v. Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Griffin, 42 Ky. 208, 3 B. Mon. 208, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 142 (Ky. Ct. App. 1842).

Opinion

Judge Maksiiall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

James W. Griffin, a citizen of Pulaski county in this State, having been found guilty, under an indictment against him for importing a slave into this state, in violation of the statute of 1833, (Stat. Law, 1482,) judgment was pronounced against him for the statutory penalty of $600; and he being in Court upon his recognizance, not to depart without leave, and was by a separate order, at the foot of the judgment, committed to jail until he should pay the penalty or be discharged by law. On a subsequent day of the same term, on motion of Griffin’s counsel, a rule was made upon the jailer to show cause why the prisoner should not be admitted to the prison rules or bounds; and the jailer having returned for cause, the manner and cause of his imprisonment, the Court ordered that he should be admitted to the prison rules upon executing bond.

To this order of the Court the Commonwealth, by her attorney, excepted, and has brought the case to this Court for its reversal. And the defendant, Griffin, having also excepted to various opinions of the Court in giving and refusing instructions, and in overruling his motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, cross errors have been assigned on his part, for the reversal of the principal judgment.

With regard to the order directing the prisoner to be admitted to the prison rules, we are of opinion, that it is advisory and incidental only, revocable at any time until actually executed, and even then perhaps, revocable in. [209]*209effect, under the power of the Court to order a capias projiuc, and to direct that the defendant, when taken under that writ, should not be admitted to the prison rules.

We are of opinion, therefore, that theorder in question not being final in its nature, this Court has' no; jurisdiction to revise or reverse it, nor any power in tins form, to control the Circuit Court-in the exercise of its discretion in regard to the treatment of prisoners by the jailer'. We would remark, however, that by the -6th section of an act of 1796, (Stat.Law, 1332,) it is expressly enacted that every prisoner not committed for treason or felony, shall upon giving security, &c. have liberty to walk within the prison rules for his health, and keeping continually within the said bounds, shall be adjudged in law a true prisoner. It is also declared by an act of 1810, (Stat. Law, 427,) that the privilege of the prison bounds shall not-be extended to any person who shall, by the judgment of any tribunal or magistrate, be sentenced to imprisonment. And by an act of 1822, the prison bounds are made coextensive with the limits of the Commonwealth, with a proviso that the act shall not be construed to abolish imprisonment for riot* routs, and breaches of the peace. Now, as we suppose, a prisoner ordered by the Court, after judgment, to stand committed until he shall pay the fine adjudged against him, cannot fairly be said to have been sentenced to imprisonment by the judgment, of the Court; it seems to follow that such a prisoner is not, by the act of 1810, deprived of the privilege of the prison rules, which is allowed him by thq> act of 1796. And although we may be satisfied that the statute of 1822, extending the prison bounds to the limits of the Stale, did not intend to operate upon the remedy of the Commonwealth for enforcing penalties, by commitment or by capias profine, but was intended to apply only to the remedy for the enforcement of debts properly so called, ■still there might bé a difficulty/in coming to the conclusion that there am any other prison bounds since the passage of that except such as are established by it And if there be no other, then it would seem to follow, either that by the extension of the prison bounds -the act ■of 1822 has repealed Ihe act-of 1796, so far as it allows [210]*210the privilege of the bounds in penal cases, which it might be difficult to establish, or that prisoners committed, not under a sentence of the Court and for punishment, but for the purpose and as a means of coercing payment of the penalty adjudged against them, being entitled by the act of 1796, to the privilege of the prison bounds, have a right to those bounds as they exist at the time of claiming the privilege, the effect of which would be to deprive the Commonwealth in many cases, of the only efficient remedy for coercing pecuniary penalties, and for even coercing the appearance of persons charged with offences below the grade of treason or felony.

The power of the Legislature, by the constitution of Kentucky, to prevent the importation of slaves into this State by the citizens thereof, is plenary and absolute.

Consequences so injuriously affecting the interests of the State, so evidently contrary to its policy, and so destructive of the efficacy of its penal laws, may be presumed not to have been intended, and might, perhaps, justify the judiciary in giving a construction to some or all of these acts which would seem scarcely to be authorized by their language. But the remedy for the difficulty seems to belong more properly to the Legislature than the judiciary. And as the questions arising on these statutes are not brought before us in such a manner as to be judicially decided, we have presented them, not for the purpose of solving them, but with the view merely of making them known.

As the order, for the reversal of which the Commonwealth has prosecuted her writ of error, is not within the jurisdiction of this Court as a revising tribunal, the writ of error is quashed.

By the cross errors assigned by the defendant, several grave questions are made :

1. It was objected in arrest of the judgment rendered on the indictment, that the act of 1833, imposing a penalty of $600 upon any person importing a slave contrary to its provisions, is in violation of the 1st section of the 8th article of the Constitution of Kentucky. But to this objection we answer, that so far as the Constitution of Kentucky is concerned, the power of the Legislature to prohibitand prevent, by reasonable penalties, the importation of slaves into this Commonwealth, would be plenary and absolute, were it not for the restriction con-[211]*211tallied in the section referred to : that the only restriction contained in that section is in favor of emigrants to this State bringing slaves with them, and that, consequently, the power of preventing such importation by citizens of the State being unaffected by the restriction, is plenary and absolute. It is, therefore, unnecessary to decide whether the act violates the restriction in favor of emigrants or not, since even if it does, it does not violate any consti. tutional privilege of the defendant, who being already a citizen and not an emigrant, when he imported the slave, can claim no benefit from the restriction, but was and is subject to the absolute power of prohibition.

The prohibitory clause of the 2d< sec. of the 4th: art; of the Constitution U. S. was intended to secure the citizens of one State against discriminations made by another State in favor of its own citizens, and does not prohibit Kentucky from preventing, by appropriate penalties, the importation of slav.es by her own citizens, The 3d clause of the 8th sec. of the 1st art. of the Constitution U. S. respecting the regulation of tweenthe^tatesj does not conflict each state to deanTto^afexí property^persons of the Afrirecognized withites — exceptnso clause oftheáth art. Con. u. s.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Ky. 208, 3 B. Mon. 208, 1842 Ky. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-griffin-kyctapp-1842.