Grahn v. State

6 Ohio N.P. 182
CourtClark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. 182 (Grahn v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grahn v. State, 6 Ohio N.P. 182 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The truant officer of South Charleston, Ohio, school district, made complaint against the plaintiff in error, under the compulsory education law for failure to compel his son, who was of school age, to attend school under section 4029-8. The affidavit was filed before and a warrant issued by a justice of the peace, Esquire Sohiokendantz, who resided in. Madison township, but not within the special school district, where the alleged offense was committód.

The defendant having been arraigned before the said justice, objected to the jurisdiction of the justice to try the case, but his motion was overruled and upen trial had, he was found guilty. Petition in error was filed in this court, assigning among other errors, that the justice had no jurisdiction to try the case. This is the only question here considered.

The law previous to 1890, as appears in Giauque’s statutes of Ohio, in section 4029-8, with reference to the duties of the truant officer, provides that he shall make “complaint against said parent, guardian or other person having the legal control of such child, in any court of competent jurisdiction in the city, village cr township in which the offence occurred.” To this section is appended a side-note calling attention to an amendment in 1890, for which see annual volume 87, page 144, and which amendment appears in Bates’ statutes, which has incorporated into it all the laws of 1890, as follows: “The truant officer shall make complaint against the parent,guardian or other person in charge, in any court of competent jurisdiction in the city, special, village or township district in which the offence occurs. ”

What is the court of competent jurisdiction? None unless the officer named in section 610, Revised Statutes, which reads so far as is necessary to this question: “Every justice of the peace shall have jurisdiction in criminal cases throughout the county in which he is elected and where he resides, on view, or on sworn complaint to cause every person charged with felony or misdemeanor to be arrested, ” etc.

There is no provision anywhere else prescribing the officer who shall have jurisdiction of this particular offense, which is a misdemeanor, under section 610, for the purposes of jurisdiction, whether it be denominated criminal or quasi criminal. The probate court under its general jurisdiction may have power to commit the juvenile offender to the state reformatory, but has no jurisdiction over the parent to try a complaint against him. With these provisions of the statute before us, arises the question of the jurisdiction of this particular justice m this special case.

The record shown that Esquire Sehickendantz did not reside or have his office in South Charleston special school district in which the alleged offense was committed, but in another [183]*183■district, to-wit, Madison tcwnship school district, and that there was a mayor and justice of the peace in said South Charleston special school district.

The change made in 1890, was done for a purpose of some kind, whetner or net the old section is to be construed into limiting the place of the trial to the township, village or city in which the offense occurred.

The action, if the words “city, or village or tcwnship in which the offense occurred, ” had not been inserted in the old law, under section 610, Revised Statutes, could have been brought before a justice of the peace m Springfield or New Carlisle, and the parties and witnesses thereby be dragged many miles away from their homes and the scene of the offense.

But from lack of proper punctuation of said original section, a doubt arises as to the purpose of such insertion of said words, whether the jurisdiction should be limited to a justice or mayor residing in such city, village or township, orto secure the actual trial of the case within the bounds of such locality. Now, punctuation plays an important part in the construction of sentences.

Anderson’s Law Dictionary, page 844, says: “When the meaning of a clause in an instrument is doubtful, the court may insert punctuation to show of what construction the words are capable: and if by such aid, the court is enabled to see that the language can bear an interpretation which will make the whole instrument rational and self consistent, it is bound to adopt that interpretation in preference to another which would attribute to the parties an intention utterly capricious, insensible and absurd. ”

Take therefore, the old section and insert a comma or other proper mark of punctuation after the word “jurisdiction,’’and it will read that he shall make “complaint against said parent, guardian or other person having the legal control of such child, in any court of competent jurisdiction, in the city, village or township in which the offense occurred.” In this oompound sentence we have thereby dearly defined the court of competent jurisdiction, viz., a justice of the peace, and mayor of a city or village: and also the locality of the trial, viz., the city, village, or township in which the offense occurred. Any other construction would be “capricious, insensible and absurd” in the way I view it, for in such statute, locality of the trial is clearly indicated, and as to the authority under section 610, any justice of the peace of Madison township, if net. cf the county, would have jurisdiction in any school district of the county, and the words “in which the offense occurs” absolutely fix the locality of trial as the all-controlling words of venue, which words I interpret for the benefit of tnose unlearned in law, from Anderson’s Law Dictionary,as “locality, neighborhood; place of trial. ”

Thus then, if the place of trial is to be within the bounds of the city, village, or township in which the offense occurred, and there should be no justice of the peace in that locality, one can be brought therefor from a broad, either from another part of the township, or, as I think, from any part of the county.

This construction accounts for the words of said section for one reason, if no ether, and that is, that the venue, or “locality of trial”,has been viewed as of the highest importance from time immemorial both at common law and under statutory enactments. The place of trial has always been fixed upon one of two ideas, viz, in criminal cases propinquity or nearness to the place of the offense, or in ■civil cases to the residence of the party who is sued.

The same reasons apply to the new-law under which this action was brought, and with still greater force and effect than as to the words of the old law.

In criminal cases the venue or ‘1 place of trial” must be in the vicinage, according to Anderson, that is, “neighborhood, county”where the offense occurred; in civil cases under $100 in the township where the party-sued resides: and in cases of higher impor[184]*184tance in the court of common pleas of the county where the party sued resides. These are the general rules except in some few matters.

Now, using like punctuation, the new law under which thi3 action was brought, will read as follows: “the truant officer shall make complaint against the parent, guardian or other person in charge of the child, in any court of competent jurisdiction, in the city, special, village or township district in which the offense occurs.”

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grahn-v-state-ohctcomplclark-1899.