Commonwealth v. M'Neill

36 Mass. 127
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 7, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Mass. 127 (Commonwealth v. M'Neill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. M'Neill, 36 Mass. 127 (Mass. 1837).

Opinion

Shaw C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court. ■ This record is so voluminous, and the pleadings branch out into so in any issues and causes of demurrer, that it would be difficult to give an intelligible abstract of the pleadings, without going into unnecessary minuteness of detail. The case resolves itself into two or three questions of law, the result of which will decide the case.

1. The first is, whether the Court of Common Pleas has original jurisdiction to receive and enroll an estreated recognizance from the Municipal Court, and issue scire facias upon it. It seemed strange that such an objection should be now taken, as it is believed to have been the universal practice for a series of years, for the Court of Common Pleas to exercise this jurisdiction, and for this Court to entertain appeals from the judgments of the Court of Common Pleas without objection ; and an instance occurred at the last term of this Court, in which a judgment was given for the Commonwealth in precisely such a case, without exception. Commonwealth v. Bail of Gordon, 15 Pick. 193. Nor are we aware of any case, in which the same jurisdiction has been claimed or exercised in any other court. A similar case was before the Court in Johnson v. [137]*137Randall, 7 Mass. R. 340. It was a recognizance taken before a justice of the peace, binding the party to appear before the Municipal Court, to answer as the putative father of a bastard child. But it did not appear that it had been returned to, or recorded in that court, or by that court ordered to be es-treated and sent to the Court of Common Pleas, where a scire facias was commenced. The Court there point out the course to be pursued, that scire facias must issue from the court where the recognizance is recorded, that justices taking recognizances are to return them to the court at which the principals are bound to appear, that if from the jurisdiction of that court it could not award execution upon a scire facias, that is, if it be a court not having jurisdiction in civil cases, it ought to certify the recognizance to some court where such execution could be awarded. The Court then cite St. 1783, c. 51, directing the Court of Sessions to certify certain recognizances to the Common Pleas, with a record of the default thereon, and for the same reason the Municipal Court ought to certify the recognizances returned there by any justice of the peace, with the default of the conusor thereon, to the Common Pleas, where it should be entered on record.

The Court, in the case cited, appear to consider the St. 1783, c. 51, § 2, as applying to all recognizances taken by justices of the peace and returnable to the Court of Sessions, whereas it applies in terms only to recognizances taken on appeals from the judgments of justices of the peace in criminal cases. But the same reason applies to other cases ; and probably this provision for certifying defaulted recognizances to the Court of Common Pleas, was only in affirmance of the preexisting law and declaratory.

But we think the jurisdiction of the Court of Common Pleas is to be sought in the statutes giving that court its general jurisdiction. Soon after the adoption of the constitution, three acts were passed on the same day, July 3d, 1783, constituting the Supreme Judicial Court, the Court of Common Pleas, and Courts of General Sessions of the Peace. These have been variously modified since, but the jurisdiction has been substantially the same. Among them, the jurisdiction of criminal and civil cases was distributed. The Court of Sessions had a lim[138]*138ited criminal jurisdiction only. The Court of Common Pleas was to have cognizance of all civil actions of the value of more than forty shillings, arising within their county, triable by common or statute law, of what nature or species soever the same might be. A recognizance is a debt upon condition, and on default it is forfeited and becomes a debt due. But the remedy is by debt or scire facias, which is a civil action. As the Sessions have no jurisdiction in matters of debt, the common process of estreat, or certificate into the Court of Common Pleas, which has that jurisdiction, seems to be the proper course, and falls within the general principle, that where a court is constituted with general jurisdiction over a subject or class of subjects, it is vested by necessary implication, if not in terms, with power to grant and use all necessary, usual and proper process, applicable to like cases, to carry that jurisdiction into execution. This conclusion is greatly strengthened by what we deem to have been the practice, not only ever since the passage of these -acts, but long before, under the provincial acts, containing substantially the same provisions, of which the statutes cited were revisions.

2. Much of the argument has turned upon another objection to the regularity of these proceedings, arising from the fact, that the justices of the Police Court before whom this recognizance was taken, after certifying and sending up one record of the recognizance, afterwards, on suggestion in writing by the attorney for the Commonwealth, certified and returned a fuller and more extended record, and statement of the facts and circumstances, as they appeared on their minutes.

The Court are of opinion, that this constitutes no valid objection to the regularity of the proceedings, and the record as more fully and particularly stated is properly before the Court. The suggestion under which such fuller record was returned, is immaterial ; had the justices, from any source, ascertained that they had sent an imperfect record, they would have been at liberty, within a reasonable time, to have sent a more perfect one.

It is a well known practice with most courts to keep a docket, or short minutes of the proceedings, from which the competent and responsible officer will make up his records afterwards. [139]*139If in doing this, in the first instance, material errors or omissions occur, he may, under his responsibility, having the proper data before him, correct them.

In Rex v. Barker, 1 East, 186, it was held, that where a magistrate had given out a copy of a conviction, and afterwards, after a certiorari had been issued, he returned a more full, perfect and complete conviction, it was open to no legal objection. Lord Kenyon stated it as his opinion, that it was not only legal but laudable for the magistrate to do as he had done, and he would have done wrong, if he had acted otherwise. And the Court recognized the practice of magistrates, of taking minutes of their proceedings to serve as memoranda for a more formal statement to be returned to the Sessions.

The two papers produced in the present case are not incou sistent with each other ; the difference is, that one is a fuller statement of the transactions than the other, and being consistent with the truth of the case, which must be taken as true, and returned at the term to which it was returnable, it is to be taken as a valid recognizance.

3. The next question is, whether this recognizance was forfeited by failure of the principal to appear personally, at the Municipal Court, at which he was bound by this recognizance to appear.

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Related

People v. Stager
10 Wend. 431 (New York Supreme Court, 1833)
Commonwealth v. Ward
4 Mass. 497 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1808)
Johnson v. Randall
7 Mass. 340 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1811)
Commonwealth v. Morey
8 Mass. 78 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1811)

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Bluebook (online)
36 Mass. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-mneill-mass-1837.