Ex parte Davis

95 Ala. 9
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 95 Ala. 9 (Ex parte Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Davis, 95 Ala. 9 (Ala. 1891).

Opinion

THOBINGTON, J.

The petitioner was tried before a justice of the peace in Pike county, on a charge of violating a written contract alleged to have been entered into by him pursuant to the provisions of section 3832 of the Criminal Code, and on preliminary investigation before a justice of the peace was committed to jail to answer the charge in the Circuit Court oí said county,

[10]*10An application for a writ of habeas corpus was made by the petitioner to tlie judge of probate of said county, based on tire ground that tlie contract which the petitioner was charged with having violated was not made and entered into in open court, on a confession of judgment by petitioner and his surety; this contention being predicated-on the following facts: A warrant was duly issued, on affidavit, against petitioner on a charge of obtaining money on false pretenses, said warrant being so issued by a justice residing in Beat (or Precinct) 14 of said county. Afterwards, on December 28th, 1891, the justice who issued the warrant being on his way to Troy, which is in Beat 1 in said county, met an officer with petitioner, whom he had arrested under the warrant, and was carrying to the office of the justice in Beat 14 for trial. Petitioner thereupon informed the justice that he desired to plead guilty to the charge in the warrant; whereupon all the parties repaired to the sheriffs office in the court-house at Troy, where the petitioner put in a plea of guilty to the charge, of which plea and his judgment thereon the justice made a memorandum, and transferred the same ' to his docket on his return to his office in Beat 14.

The bill of exceptions states that, at the time of receiving the plea and noting the judgment, the justice did not open his court, nor did he have his docket with him, nor did he come to Troy on that day for the purpose of holding court; and that at the time of pleading guilty as aforesaid, petitioner signed a contract with one Bush to work for him as set forth in the bill of exceptions, which contract was approved by the justice, and ¡purports to have been recorded in the office of the judge of probate. A copy of the judgment entered on petitioner’s plea of guilty is shown by the bill of exceptions as it appears on the docket of the justice, and which recites that “the defendant appeared in open court, and pleaded guilty to the charge,” &c.; and also recites that the fine and costs were settled in full by said Bush.

There is nothing on the face of the judgment indicating that the proceedings were had, or the judgment rendered, elsewhere than at the office of the justice, or that the fine and costs were paid before the contract was entered into. The contract entered into by petitioner with said Bush is also set out in the bill of exceptions, and recites on its face that petitioner was, on the day of its date, convicted of a misdemeanor “in the justice court of Pike county, Ala.,” and that said Bush had become the surety of petitioner for the fine and costs in the case. The contract binds petitioner [11]*11to work fox said Bush a sufficient length of time to pay tbe fine and costs, and also any advances Bush should make to petitioner during the term of service, at the rate petitioner was allowed to pay the fine and costs; and the contract also includes ten dollars over and above the fine and costs, which was paid by Bush to one Rhodes, at petitioner’s request, on a debt the latter owed Rhodes. The contract is signed by petitioner and said Bush, and recites that it was signed in open court. It is approved in writing by the justice, and was recorded in the office of the probate judge.

In order to entitle the petitioner to a discharge on the application for a writ of habeas corpus, something more than mere irregularity and error in the proceedings or process by which he is detained in custody must be shown. . If there is jurisdiction in the court to try the offense imputed to the prisoner, no error or irregularity which may have occurred or been committed in exercising such jurisdiction can be inquired into on habeas corpus. An appeal is the appropriate remedy for the correction of such errors and irregulari-ties. — Ex parte McKivett, 55 Ala. 236; Ex parte State, in re Long, 87 Ala. 46. “Illegality, not irregularity, must infect the proceeding, to authorize a discharge on habeas corpus.” Ex parte Brown, 63 Ala. 187.

The Constitution of this State requires the election of two justices of the peace in each precinct of the counties, by the qualified electors thereof, and defines their jurisdiction in civil cases, but not in criminal cases. — Art. YI, § 26. And the statute, Code, § 341, following the Constitution, requires the election of two justices of the peace “for each election precinct.” Section 4233 of the Criminal Code declares that justices of the peace have, in their respective counties, jurisdiction of the offenses named in said section; and chapter three of said Code provides the jurisdiction and proceedings before justices, and other officers, on preliminary investigations of public offenses.

In Horton v. Elliott, 90 Ala. 480, it was decided by this court, that a justice of the peace, elected in one precinct, has no jurisdiction to hear and determine a civil case in an adjoining precinct, except in cases of emergency as provided in the statutes. But it was said in that case, “In what we have said no reference is had to the jurisdiction of a justice when sitting as an examining court, on the preliminary investigation of a criminal chargé.”

In Boynton v. The State, 77 Ala. 29, in a case growing out of a preliminary investigation of a public offense, in which one justice of the peace had associated two others with him on [12]*12tbe bearing, it is said, “Two of these officers . . . were ■unquestionably competent to sit in tbe cause, either one of them alone constituting a legal examining tribunal for tbe purpose of such a trial. It was no objection to them that they were bolding their court out of their beats, or precincts, because justices of tbe peace in this State have a criminal jurisdiction in such matters co-extensive with their counties;” and sections 4628, 4632 and 4663 of tbe Code of 1876 are cited-to support tbe proposition. These sections are identical with sections 4223, 3716 and 4274 of tbe present Code, in so far as they affect tbe territorial jurisdiction of a justice of tbe peace, and sustain tbe proposition announced in tbe above cited case only in a limited sense.

There are several sections of tbe Code which prescribe specific cases in which justices of tbe peace may bear and determine preliminary investigations of crime, within their counties, outside of their own precincts; such, for exampié, as sections 4274, 4279,4280 and 4282; but tbe very fact that •these statutes permit it in tbe cases therein designated, is sufficient to show that such authority would not exist but for such statutes, and excludes tbe idea that tbe jurisdiction exists in other cases not provided for by tbe statutes.

Tbe principle, as announced in tbe words above quoted from Boynton v. The State, is stated too broadly, and should be confined in its application to cases of like character.

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Bluebook (online)
95 Ala. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-davis-ala-1891.