Hancock v. Davidson County

104 S.W.2d 824, 171 Tenn. 420, 7 Beeler 420, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 122
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 104 S.W.2d 824 (Hancock v. Davidson County) 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
Hancock v. Davidson County, 104 S.W.2d 824, 171 Tenn. 420, 7 Beeler 420, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 122 (Tenn. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*424 The bill herein assails the validity of an act of the Legislature, chapter 12 of the Private Acts of 1937. A demurrer to the bill was sustained and the complainant appealed.

The statute in question creates a court of general sessions with three judges for Davidson County and section 2 provides that the court “is hereby vested with all the jurisdiction and shall exercise the authority conferred by the Legislature upon justices of the peace in civü and criminal eases, suits and actions; and the justices of the peace of Davidson County, Tennessee, are hereby divested of all such jurisdiction and authority. The authority of said justices of the peace in their capacity as members of the quarterly court or in the performance of the rites of matrimony is in nowise affected by this Act.”

It was enacted that Davidson County should provide for the equipment and maintenance of the court and that Davidson County should pay each of the judges a salary of $4,000 per annum “out of the ordinary funds of the county. ’ ’

Other provisions of the act will be noticed in the course of the opinion.

The first proposition of the appellant is that the said act of 1937 violates section 29 of article 2 of the Constitution of Tennessee because it effects the levy of a •tax by Davidson County to pay salaries of public officers, who are strictly state officers, and who perform no services for the county aside from the services rendered by them as state officers.

This proposition rests on the premise that in the exercise of the jurisdiction and authority transferred from them by this statute to the court of general sessions jus *425 tices of the peace acted solely as judicial officers and therefore as state officers.

In onr opinion this premise is nnsonnd.

The court of general sessions, under the act before us, will render the identical services rendered hy justices of the peace “in civil and criminal cases, suits and actions.” If justices of the peace rendered services “in civil and criminal cases, suits and actions” for which they were properly compensated hy Davidson County, it follows that the court of general sessions may he compensated hy the county for rendering the same services to said county.

The services of justices of the peace in criminal cases have always been, in a large measure, recognized as services to the county and the costs of such services made chargeable to the county by statute. Code, section 12228 et seq.; Code, section 12249. These statutes include fees for services rendered hy justices of the peace that are strictly judicial in their nature.

Some of such services, judicial in nature, seem to he exclusively for the benefit of the county. For instance, the jurisdiction of justices of the peace in bastardy cases, by the very terms of the statute, is conferred and their duties prescribed in order “to keep such child from being chargeable on the county.” Code, sections 11936, 11937 et seq.

It is to be observed furthermore that the act of 1937 transfers from justices of the peace not only their jurisdiction of civil and criminal cases, suits, and actions, but transfers “the authority” of justices of the peace in civil and criminal cases, suits, and actions.

Much of the authority and much of the duty of justices of the peace, at least in criminal cases, suits, and actions, *426 is ministerial in its nature rather than judicial. One of the most important functions of a justice of the peace is the conservation of the peace, including the preliminary hearing of criminal charges and the commitment of offenders rather than the trial of offenders upon such charges.

Blackstone (vol. 1, 349) gives an interesting though brief account of the origin and development of the office of justice of the peace and shows that in the beginning such officers were mere conservators of the peace, their judicial powers being conferred by later statutes. In this connection the author points out that the King was the principal conservator of the peace and that the King and certain high functionaries were conservators of the peace throughout the realm, but that justices of the peace were created for the conservation of the peace in their respective counties.

The latter distinction in the scope of the authority of justices of the peace and other magistrates is preserved in the statutes of Tennessee.

. By Code, section 11428 “The judges of the supreme, chancery, circuit, and criminal courts throughout the state, judges of the county courts, and justices of the peace in their respective counties, . . . are magistrates within the meaning of this and the following titles, and may require persons to give security for good behavior, and to keep the peace in the manner provided in this Chapter.”

By Code, section 11514 the same officials mentioned in the section above quoted are declared to be magistrates, and Code, section 11517 provides that “magistrates are authorized within their jurisdiction, to issue warrants of arrest.” Section 11529' provides that when a warrant *427 is “issued by a judge of the Supreme, circuit, or criminal court, it may be executed in any county of the state; and such judge may empower, by special direction embodied in the warrant, any suitable person, by name, to execute such warrant anywhere in the state.”

So while decisions of this court are to the effect that a justice of the peace, in the exercise of strictly judicial functions, is a state officer, it is plain from our statutes, as well as from adopted English statutes, that, in the exercise of other functions, the justice of the peace is strictly a county officer. In the exercise of still other functions, he is primarily a county officer, and the same must be said of 'these newly created functionaries who succeed to the jurisdiction and authority of justices of the peace in criminal cases, suits, and actions.

The appellant relies chiefly upon Shelby Country v. Six Judges, 3 Shan. Cas., 508, and the Judges' Salary Cases, 110 Tenn., 370, 75 S. W., 1061, 1065. These cases declared invalid certain statutes by which the quarterly county court of Shelby county was authorized to supplement the salaries provided by the state for judges and chancellors.

The statutes were held to violate section 7 of article 6 of the Constitution providing that “The Judges of the Supreme or Inferior Courts shall, at stated times, receive a compensation for their services, to be ascertained by law, which shall not be increased or diminished during the time for which thev are elected. They shall not be allowed any fees or peronisites of office, nor hold anv office of trust or profit under this ¡State or the "United States.” Obviously, a justice of the peace is not within the purview of this section of the Constitution since he has always been entitled to “fees or perquisites of office.”

*428

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.W.2d 824, 171 Tenn. 420, 7 Beeler 420, 1937 Tenn. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hancock-v-davidson-county-tenn-1937.