Hill v. State

1910 OK CR 88, 109 P. 291, 3 Okla. Crim. 686, 1910 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 238
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 4, 1910
DocketNo. A-510.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1910 OK CR 88 (Hill v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. State, 1910 OK CR 88, 109 P. 291, 3 Okla. Crim. 686, 1910 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 238 (Okla. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

.RICHARDSON, Judge.

The question of paramount importance in this ease is whether á defendant, over his objection, can be lawfully placed upon trial in the superior court for a misdemeanor before a jury composed of only six men. We are compelled to answer the question in the negative.

Section 19 of article 2 of our Constitution provides:

“The right of trial by jury shall be and remain inviolate, and a jury for the trial of civil and criminal cases in courts of record, other than county courts, shall consist of twelve men; but in county courts and courts not of record a jury shall consist of six men.”

In addition to the district and county courts specially created by our Constitution, the Legislature of this state by act approved March 6, 1909, created in every county in this state having a population of 30,000 or more, and having a city therein with a population of 8,000 or more, a court known as the superior court of such county, and bestowed up'on it general civil and criminal jurisdiction coextensive with the county. It gave to such court jurisdiction concurrent with the district court in all proceedings, causes and matters whatsoever, and jurisdiction concurrent with the county court in all civil and criminal matters, except matters of probate. It provided for a clerk, seal and records for said court, and by express terms made it a court of record. The act contained this further provision:

“Juries in said court shall be composed of the same number of men of the same qualifications as in the district court, and all laws relative to juries and jurors for district courts shall be, and are hereby made applicable to the said superior courts: Provided, however, that all misdemeanor cases shall be tried by a jury of six men, instead of twelve, to be selected the same as juries in the district courts.” (Snyder’s Comp. Laws of Okla., art. 4, chap. 24.)

There appears to us but little room for argument upon this *689 question.' If- it b'e conceded that the- superior courts are “courts of record other than county courts/’ then alt debatable ground disappears; and after'a statement of that conceded fact as the'premise, nothing remains to be done but to substitute in the constitutional provision the term “superior courts” for" its equivalent expression, “courts of record, other than county courts”, and the conclusion inevitably follows that therefore by the mandate of the' Constitution a jury for the trial of civil and criminal cases in the superior courts shall consist of twelve men.

Counsel for the state, however, does not concede that the superior courts are courts other than county courts; on the contrary he insists that whenever the superior courts are exercising jurisdiction concurrent with the county courts, they are county ■ courts within the meaning of the Constitution. This then being the question, it might be well to define our terms before we proceed further. What is meant by the term “county courts” as used in this section of the Constitution ? Does that term refer to that, certain court, created in and far each county, defined, described and' its jurisdiction granted and limited by sections 11 to 17'inclusive of article 7 of the Constitution? Or is it used to designate a class of courts so known and denominated because their jurisdiction is limited by the geographical boundaries of the county ? If this last is true, then how many county courts are there in Logan County ? There is the District Court of Logan County, the Superior Court, of Logan County, and the County Court of Logan County, each of whose jurisdiction is limited by the 'geographical boundaries of the county. And in addition there are the various justice of the peace courts of Logan County, none of which are courts of record, but all of which exercise their jurisdiction co-extensive with, the county (sec. 18, art. 7 of Const., and sec. 8788, Snyder’s Comp.. Laws of Okla.), and are therefore, according to the test, county courts. And if the- foregoing is true, then what courts have :we-left to which section 19 of article 2. of-the Constitution -can apply?'. “A jury for the trial of civil and criminal cases in' courts of record other than county courts, -shall consist of twelve men, but- in- *690 county courts and courts not of record a jury shall consist of six men”, says the Constitution. Yet, according to the test, all of the tribunals clothed with judicial power in this state are county courts, except the Senate when sitting as a court of impeachment, the Supreme Court and the Criminal Court of Appeals, none of which use a jury at all. Therefore the only jury known to our law is a jury of six men, and the constitutional provision in regard to a jury of twelve men is a jumble of meaningless words.

Take the other line of argument urged by the state, namely, that if the county courts referred to in Section 19 of article 2 of the Constitution are the county courts created by section 11 of article 7 of the Constitution,' still any other courts created pursuant to section 1 of article 7 of the Constitution are county courts within the meaning of the first quoted section when lawfully exercising jurisdiction concurrent with the county courts. If that is true, then 'is not the district court a county court when it is trying an action in debt for any amount between $500.00 and $1,000.00;, an action of which the district and county courts have concurrent jurisdiction? The district court, to be sure, is a court created by the Constitution itself, but so is the county court. The creation of the superior court, however, is authorized by the Constitution. The only difference is that the district court cannot be abolished by the Legislature, nor the jurisdiction unreservedly given it by the Constitution taken away, while the superior court may be abolished or its jurisdiction limited as the Legislature may see fit. But so long as the latter is not abolished and its jurisdiction not limited, so long as its jurisdiction is concurrent with the district court in all proceedings, matters and causes whatsoever, why should not the same reasoning apply to the district court which is sought to be applied to the superior courts? Why would not the district court be as much a county court as would the superior court when it exercises jurisdiction concurrent with the.county court? And if it be true, as contended by the state, that an inherent distinction exists between the district court and the superior court’ in this respect because the one is of legis *691 lative and tbe other of constitutional origin, then we answer that that same distinction must be made between the county courts and the superior courts, for here also the one is of legislative and the other of constitutional origin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1910 OK CR 88, 109 P. 291, 3 Okla. Crim. 686, 1910 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-state-oklacrimapp-1910.