Greenwood v. State

65 Tenn. 567
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 Tenn. 567 (Greenwood v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenwood v. State, 65 Tenn. 567 (Tenn. 1873).

Opinion

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Greenwood and others were indicted in the Criminal Court of Shelby county for keeping a gaming house. The matter of defense set up by the defendant was a former conviction, which was presented in the form of an agreement between the Attorney General and the defendant, and is as follows:

1. That if defendant kept a gaming house, it was within the corporate limits of the city.

2. That the said defendant has been regularly [568]*568fined and punished by the lawful municipal authorities, or court for the said city, for the said offense of keeping a gaming house mentioned in said indictment.

The parties add further, that all formalities of pleading are expressly waived, and the question desired to be passed upon by the court is, whether the said defendant, after being fined, convicted and punished by the municipal government, or its proper officials, for the said offense, can be held by the State to answer for the identical offense.

The question presented for our decision is, whether^ where a party has been convicted and punished for keeping a gaming house by the municipal authorities of a town or city, this fact is a bar to a prosecution for the same offense by the State.

We may remark, that art. 5 of Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, providing, among other things, that “no person shall be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb/’ has no application to the States, being only a limitation on the Federal Government. 7 Peters, 243; 7 Wall., 326, and cases there cited. Our own Constitution, art. 1, sec. 10, is, that “no person shall for the same offense be twice put in jeopardy of life and limb,” the language being identical with that of the Constitution of the United States.

Whether this clause, or the same provision in the Constitution of the United States, applies to offenses the punishment of which does not extend to “life or limb,” or to crimes as distinguished from misdemean[569]*569ors, and was not intended originally to give the high sanction of a constitutional guaranty against the repetition of the prosecution only in such cases, we need not decide at present. That this is the literal meaning of the language is pretty clear, and it was certainly understood to apply only to offenses punished by loss of life or limb, by our earlier judges on this bench, as held in the case of The State v. Reynolds, 4 Hay., 110, decided in 1817. In that case a party had been acquitted of perjury, and it was sought to have the case reviewed in that court by appeal on the part of the State. The court, in referring to the rule of the common law, and enforcing it, that no one could be put in jeopardy twice for the same offense, say that this article of the Bill of rights had no application to the question, for here the punishment does not extend to life or limb.” However, as held by the court in that case, it is well settled by the common law that no one could be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense, and so, whether the protection sought is found in the Constitution or in the common law, in this case, it equally presents the same difficulty in its solution.

In endeavoring to arrive at a proper conclusion on this question, we must remember, according to the idea of Judge Cooley in the ease of The People v. Hurlburt, 24 Mich. R., 96, that the Constitution of our State assumes the existence of counties and municipal corporations, the latter having and exercising such powers of local self-government under grants in charters from the Legislature as might be necessary [570]*570for their proper regulation, and the maintenance of the peace, good order and protection of the people thus aggregated in large masses. That the existence of such municipal corporations being assumed and recognized in the Constitution as part of the arrangement contemplated to make up the machinery of the great corporate body, the State, it must be fairly understood that the people or convention contemplated that these corporations should have and exercise all the usual powers proper and necessary for the perpetuation of their existence, and for the due regulation of their peculiar life, so to speak. We therefore conclude, that whatever may have been the usual powers granted or ordinarily held by these corporate bodies at the organization of our government, and whatever powers necessary and proper to be exercised by them, as an incident to their existence, as part of the machinery of the government of the State, were expected to be continued to them under legislative grants in their charters, and this by the very fact of the clear recognition of the fact that such bodies should exist in the Constitution of our State.

As k matter of history, we know that the organization of municipal corporations was one of the most efficient agencies by which freedom and government by law, rather than strong hand, was introduced and fostered in Europe in the middle ages. Robinson, in his view of the progress of society in Europe, Introduction to History of Charles V., p. 19, in referring to the institutions which had tended to secure the liberty and independence of the people, says: “The form[571]*571ing of cities into communities, corporations, or bodies politic, and granting them privileges of municipal jurisdiction, contributed more, perhaps, than any other cause to introduce regular government, police and arts, and diffuse them over Europe,” than any one of the various causes which he enumerates in his essay as contributing to these desirable ends. In enumerating the powers which were thus obtained by these chartered communities, among other important rights, the -same author says: “They were recognized as bodies politic to be governed by a council and magistrates of their own nomination. These magistrates had the right of administering justice within their own precincts, of levying taxes, of embodying and training to arms the militia of the town, which were officered by men appointed by the municipal authorities. These institutions, originating in this form in Italy in the twelfth century, adopted in France soon after, were in no great length of time transferred to England, the country from whence we derive our jurisprudence. There, it is true, modified in some of their aspects to meet the wants of a great people, and being gradually, to a greater or less extent, subordinated to the general control of the supreme legislative body, the Parliament, yet still maintaining many of their chartered rights as inviolable, and clinging to them as essential to their freedom and even their existence, as one of the subordinate political divisions of the State, continued up to the time of the separation of the colonies from that country.

In this form we received this institution, and our [572]*572political fabric has been reared, so to speak, with the municipal corporation as one of its integral elements, forming, as we may readily see, one of the necessary parts of the social and political organization under which we live, without which the government of the State would be incomplete, and utterly fail to attain one of its great ends, the protection and security of person and property in towns and cities, as well as throughout its entire- territory.

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Robinson v. Neil
320 F. Supp. 894 (E.D. Tennessee, 1971)
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268 F. Supp. 349 (E.D. Tennessee, 1967)
Mullins v. State
380 S.W.2d 201 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
65 Tenn. 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-v-state-tenn-1873.