Hogan v. State

30 Wis. 428
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 30 Wis. 428 (Hogan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hogan v. State, 30 Wis. 428 (Wis. 1872).

Opinions

LyoN, J.

At the June Term, 1868, of the circuit court for the county of Manitowoc, the plaintiff in error was indicted for the crime of murder, and at the June term, 1870, of the same court, be was tried upon such indictment, convicted and sentenced by the court to imprisonment in the state prison for life. He has sued out a writ of error to obtain here a review of the judgment of the circuit court. No bill of exceptions has been settled and returned, and therefore the evidence given on the trial is not before us. Many objections to the validity of the indictment, and also to the validity of the proceedings in the case, have been argued with great ability by the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error, and are relied upon to reverse the judgment of the circuit court. These objections, or such of them as it is deemed material to notice, will be considered in the order here indicated, and the facts of the case applicable to each objection, so far as such facts are disclosed by the record, will, for convenience, be stated in the appropriate connection.

I. It is claimed that there is no valid indictment against the plaintiff in error, for the following alleged reasons: 1st, because it was not found by a legal grand jury; 2d, because the record does not show that the indictment was delivered into [430]*430court; and 3d, because the same is fatally defective in that it does not show the name of the judge who presided in the court at the term wben the same was found. These objections to the validity of the indictment will be considered in their order.

1st. Tbe plaintiff in error interposed a plea in abatement of the indictment, averring therein that the grand jury which found the indictment, was illegally drawn. Issue was taken upon the plea by the state and the same was tried by the court. Tbe finding by the court upon such issue is to the effect, that such grand jury was drawn by the clerk of said circuit court, in presence of the sheriff of Manitowoc county, and of one William G-. Eldridge, who was then the police justice of the village of Manitowoc, in said county. Tbe court held that the grand jury was legally drawn.

Tbe statute then in force required tbe clerk of tbe court to draw tbe names of tbe persons to be summoned, to serve as grand jurors, in tbe presence of tbe sheriff or under sheriff, and a justice of the peace. ” R. S., chap. 118, sec. 8. Such is still tbe law, without doubt, should a circuit judge order a grand jury to be drawn and summoned, as be may lawfully do. Taylor’s Statutes, 1330, §§ 13 and 14.

Conceding that the indictment is invalid and no lawful conviction can be bad thereon unless the grand jury which found it was drawn in presence of a justice of the peace, the question to be determined is, whether the police justice of the village of Manitowoc is a justice of the peace within the meaning of sec. 8, above cited, or rather, is be clothed by law with the power and authority of a justice of the peace, for the purposes contemplated by that section ? Tbe charter of that village provides for the election of a police justice therein, whose term of office, like that of a justice of the peace, is two years, and pro. vides also that “ Tbe police justice shall have and possess all of the authority, powers and rights of a justice of the peace in civil and criminal proceedings, and shall have - sole and exclusive jurisdiction to bear all complaints and conduct all exam[431]*431inations and trials in criminal cases witbin the village, to wbicb the village may be a party, and shall bave exclusive jurisdiction in all cases to wbicb the village shall be a party, cognizable before a justice of the peace, and shall bave the same power and authority in cases of contempt as a court of record.” Pr. and Local Laws of 1868, chap. 335, sub-chap. 5, sec. 6; Id., sub-chap. 3, sec. 3.

Tbe whole question evidently turns upon the meaning wbicb is given to the term “ proceedings,” in the charter. If it be construed to mean, as counsel for plaintiff in error contends, only the proceedings in an action, it seems to follow that the police justice was not authorized by law to witness officially the drawing of the grand jury. We are referred to the language of Judge Gardner in Morewood v. Hollister, 6 N. Y., (2 Seld.), 309, as sanctioning this restricted construction of the word “proceedings.” But an examination of that case will show that the court gave the broadest possible construction to the word. An act provided that, “ whenever any authority shall be exercised by any officer, pursuant to any provisions ” of a certain title, “ the proceedings may be removed into the Supreme Court by certiorari, and there examined and corrected.” On a certiorari, pursuant to such law, the Supreme Court held that only such proceedings as were jurisdictional could be thus “ removed, examined and corrected.” Tbe Court of Appeals held that the term “ proceedings ” as used in the act, meant “ all the matters connected with or attending the exercise of the power, wbicb are necessary to enable the corut of review to determine its validity and correctness.”

The counsel also claims that Webster defines tbe word “proceedings ” thus: “ Tbe course or steps or measures in tbe prosecution of actions,” etc. This is doubtless correct when tbe word is used only in reference to actions, and not in a general sense. But I do not find this definition in Webster. Neither do I find that be gives any definition wbicb necessarily restricts tbe word to particulars, when it is used in a general sense, and [432]*432it is evidently so used in tbe law specifying tbe powers of tbe police justice, witb tbe single limitation that tbe proceedings must be either of a civil or criminal character. All proceedings in a court of justice are either civil or criminal, and hence tbe drawing of a grand jury, which is a proceeding in a court of justice, is either a civil or criminal proceeding within the meaning of the law just mentioned. Had the legislature intended to restrict the powers of the police justice to proceedings in actions, it was very easy to so provide, but instead of enacting such a limitation upon the powers of that officer, the law, in general terms, confers upon him the. powers possessed by justices of the peace, “in civil and criminal proceedings.” Not having imposed in terms the limitation contended for, it is reasonable to infer that the legislature did not intend to do so. But were this otherwise, it would not be very absurd to hold that the drawing of the grand jury, which found the indictment against the plaintiff in error, was a proceeding in the action or criminal prosecution against him. I prefer, however, to rest the decision of the question upon the broader grounds above indicated.

I am of the opinion, therefore, that the police justice of the village of Manitowoc, is vested by law, with the power and authority of a justice of the peace, in respect to the drawing of a grand jury, and hence, that the indictment is not invalid, because the former officer, and not the latter, participated in the drawing of the grand jury by which it was found.

2. Does the record show that the indictment was delivered into court by the grand jury ? I think that this question must be answered in the affirmative. There is endorsed upon the indictment the usual certificate of filing, signed by the clerk, as follows: ' “ Filed June 25th, 1868.” Then we find in the minutes of the clerk of the circuit court, which I suppose is a part of the record, the following entry: “ State of Wisconsin, Man-itowoc county, circuit court. State of Wisconsin agst.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Wis. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-state-wis-1872.