Derby v. State

14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 304, 6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 91
CourtLorain Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 304 (Derby v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Derby v. State, 14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 304, 6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 91 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

The plaint,C in error was arrested and brought before a justice of the peace upon the charge oí having, on June 8, 1901, in the county of Lorain and state ol Ohio, ‘‘unlawlully, knowingly and purposely and [305]*305wilfully caught certain fish by means of and with a certain device called a seine.”

This is in violation of the statutes of Ohio. The affidavit making the charge has all the negative averments and all other averments sufficient to describe the offense under the statute.

Thereafter, on December 26, 1901, the case came on for trial before the justice and a jury. The trial was not completed until December 27. The result was a verdict of guilty against the defendant. Motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and judgment entered upon the verdict, and on January 4, 1902, the court pronounced sentence that “R. Derby, Jr., the defendant, pay a fine of $1U0, and in case of neglect or refusal to pay said fine, be imprisoned in the workhouse tor the full period of thirty ■ days, or until the amount of said fine be paid or secured to be paid, or he be otherwise legally discharged, and .that he pay the costs of the prosecution.” To which sentence the defendant excepted.

To reverse this judgment and sentence of the justice there was filed in the court of common pleas a petition in error, together with a transcript of the docket entries made by the justice, the original papers, and what purports to be a bill of exceptions. This bill of exceptions does not set out all the evidence adduced before the justice, so that there was presented to the court of common pleas no question as to whether the facts warranted the conviction. Upon hearing in the last-named court the judgment of the.justice was affirmed.

The proceeding in this court is brought for the purpose of reversing this judgment of affirmance and the judgment of the justice.

Among the errors complained of is the sentence which was pronounced by the justice, which was, that the plaintifi in error pay a fine of $100. It is urged on behalf of the plaintiff in error that this sentence was not authorized by any statute of the state in iorce at the time the sentence was pronounced. This necessitates an examination of the statutes. In 94 O. L. 821 appears a statute passed as an amendment to Sec. 6968 Rev. Stat. This statute is attested by the signatures of the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate, and alter such signature there appears in the printed volume th»r words ‘‘Passed April 16, 1900,” and also the figures and letter following, ‘‘206 G.” On page 349 of the same volume appears» statute passed as an amendment to the same section. This is also attested by the signatures of the speaker of the house of representative» and the president of the senate, and alter such signatures appear the words “Passed. April 16, 1900,” and the figures and letter “226 G.” By the statute first mentioned the fine for the offense, of which the plaintiff in error was convicted, is fixed at not less than $25 nor more than $100. The [306]*306other statute fixes the fine for the same oflense at not less than $25 not more than $50.

It is manifest that both these statutes cannot be in force at one and the same lime; for the maximum fine for an offense cannot be at the same time fifty dollars and one hundred dollars. Under the rule that statutes take effect from the date at which they are signed by the presiding officers of the two houses of the legislature, it would appear from what has already been quoted that each of these two statutes took effect on April lb, 1900, and though it is admitted on the part of the defendant in error that both cannot have been operative at the same time, yet it is said that the justice might have ascertained by evidence which one of the statutes was as a matter of fact last passed by the legislature, because it is said that the one last passed must be the one in force.

It is further urged that since the evidence upon which the justice acted in determining which of these statutes was last passed, is not before this court, we must presume that he did take evidence, and that the evidence was such as to justify the finding that the statute fixing the maximum fine at $100 was last passed. This is urged strenuously, and our attention is called to a written communication from the attorney general of the state, in which this argument is used. However plausible the argument, it is manifestly unsound. It overlooks the proposition that courts must take judicial notice of the statutes of their own state in force at the time. It must be conceded that the reading of the two statutes does not disclose which was last passed, and that, therefore, some evidence outside of the reading must be had; and it is said that a reviewing court is not to take evidence to determine a fact which the lower court must have determined, but must presume that the evidence adduced in the lower court was such as to justify the conclusion at which it arrived. If this is so, it follows that whenever by reason of the bungling manner in which the legislature has done its work, or the bungling manner in which the printer of the volume of the statutes has done his work, leaves it uncertain what statute was last passed, a reviewing court is left without power to determine that question, if it has been determined by the court which is being reviewed, and the evidence upon which the lower court acted is not before the reviewing court. Is it possible that the reviewing court is not bound to determine what the statute is on a given subject because, on account of some blunder, the printed volume of the statutes does not distinctly show what statute is in force ?

The statute found in 94 O. L. 321 is designated, “House Bill 96,” and that found on page 349 is designated,. “Senate Bill 216,” and here[307]*307after in this opinion the lormer will be spoken of as “Bill 96’’ and the latter as “Bill 216.”

Suppose that by reason oi the carelessness of the printer the date at which each ot these bills was passed was so indistinctly printed that one could not by looking at the bills as printed, determine the date, and the lower court determines upon some evidence, no matter what, that the date appearing on Bill 96 is April 18, and that the date appearing on Bill 216 is April 15, and so holds that Bill 96 was the one last passed. The evidence upon which this decision was made is not brought before the reviewing court, but the plaintiff in error offers to show that the date of Bill 96 is April 15, and the date of Bill 216 is April 18, is it possible that the reviewing court would decline to examine such evidence ? Although the courts are bound to take judicial notice of the statutes of the state in force, they do not instinctively know what statutes are in force, but must ascertain by evidence; ordinarily the evidence is the printed volumes of the statutes, but where such printed volumes leave the question in doubt, it is clear some other evidence must be resorted to. If this proposition is not sound, then if the penalty provided in Bill 96 were imprisonment in the county jail for not less than ten nor more than thirty da3's without any fine whatever, and a conviction was had before a justice of the peace, and sentence ol imprisonment pronounced against the prisoner, and the case came by proper proceedings in error before a reviewing court, the court would be bound to presume that the lower court had acted upon sufficient evidence, and the judgment and sentence would be affirmed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio C.C. Dec. 304, 6 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derby-v-state-ohcirctlorain-1902.