In Re Bordelon

29 So. 2d 162, 210 La. 1080, 1946 La. LEXIS 860
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 13, 1946
DocketNo. 38338.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 So. 2d 162 (In Re Bordelon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bordelon, 29 So. 2d 162, 210 La. 1080, 1946 La. LEXIS 860 (La. 1946).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This is a proceeding by certiorari, prohibition and mandamus to cancel a peace bond of $10,000.

The order requiring the relator to furnish the bond was granted by the judge ■of the district court on August 8, 1946, on the affidavit of four persons who appeared before him and declared under oath that they had just cause to apprehend that a breach of the peace was intended by Hansen D. Bordelon, who is the relator in this proceeding, and that unless the judge would -order him to give bond to keep the peace he would, according to their fears, do them bodily harm.

The judge acted under authority of Section 35 of Article VII of the Constitution declaring that district judges shall have jurisdiction to require bonds to keep the peace, and under authority of Article 27 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, prescribing the procedure for requiring peace bonds. The article provides that a judge shall have authority in all cases in which it shall appear to him by the oath of a credible person that a breach of the peace has been committed, or that there is just cause to apprehend that a breach of the peace is intended, to cause the person charged with such breach, or with such intention, to be brought before him, and to direct that he shall give such security as to the judge may seem reasonable, to keep the peace of the state, and to answer 'for the offense if any has been committed. The article provides further that in case of a refusal of the party accused to give the bond the judge shall commit him to the custody of the sheriff, who shall imprison him until he shall give the bond. It is declared in the article that in peace-bond cases no fees or costs shall be taxed against the parish or against either the complain- f ant or the person placed under the peace bond.

The order of the judge directing the sheriff to arrest Bordelon and to require him to give the peace bond of $10,000 for a period of 12 months, or to commit him to jail if he should refuse to give the bond, was signed by the judge without first ordering Bordelon to be brought before the judge. But, on the next morning, August 9th, Bordelon informed' his attorney of his having been ordered to furnish the peace bond, and the attorney, according to a statement made in his brief, interviewed the *1086 judge and advised him of a ruling made by an assistant attorney general in 1938 to the effect that judges of the district courts had not jurisdiction to require peace bonds. It is admitted also in the relator’s brief .that the judge thereupon stated that he would look into the question of jurisdiction and would instruct the sheriff to withhold enforcement of the order requiring the peace bond -until August 12th. It was agreed then by and between the judge and Bordelon’s attorney that the latter would appear before the judge with Bordelon on August 12th and present his plea. On that date Bordelon and his attorney appeared in the court room, before the judge, and filed an exception to the jurisdiction of the judge to require peace bonds. The attorney then cited in support of his exception the case of State ex rel. Caladera v. Restiva, 149 La. 462, 89 So. 425, and the opinion rendered by an assistant attorney general on June 9, 1938, reported in the Opinions of the Attorney General for 1938— 1940, page 148. The judge overruled the relator’s plea to the jurisdiction; and, according to the return made by the judge, the relator declined to make any further statement. It is stated also in the return made by the judge in response to the rule issued in this case that when he signed the order for the peace bond, on August 8th, he directed the sheriff that, before arresting Bordelon, he should bring him before the judge in order that he might be given a hearing, and that the sheriff should bring also any witnesses whom Bordelon, might see fit to produce. It is admitted that the four persons who had made the affidavit on which the judge granted the order requiring Bordelon to ■ furnish the peace bond were in court when Bordelon appeared with his attorney on August 12th and' filed his plea to the jurisdiction of the-court. When the plea was overruled the judge informed Bordelon that he might make any statement that he or his attorney-might see fit to make. The attorney requested that the clerk of court should make a record of the proceedings. The judge,, having in mind the provision in Article 27 of the Code of Criminal Procedure that no fees or costs should be taxable against the parish or" against the complainant or the person placed under a peace bond in-such cases, informed Bordelon’s attorney that he might, at his own expense, have a. .record made of the proceedings. According to the judge’s return the attorney declined to have a record of the proceedings made by a stenographer at the expense of Bordelon, and gave notice to the judge that he would apply to the supreme court for writs of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus. He did not complain to the judge of the size of the bond which the judge-required, but informed the sheriff at the time of signing it that he signed it under protest.

In the brief filed in this court the attorneys for the relator insist that his exception to the jurisdiction of the judge of the district court was well founded, according- *1088 to the decision rendered in State ex rel. Caladera v. Restiva, 149 La. 462, 89 So. 425, and the opinion rendered by the assistant attorney general on June 9, 1938, reported in the Opinions of the Attorney General 1938-1940, page 148.

We agree with the judge of the district court that the exception to his jurisdiction was not well founded. The opinion rendered by the assistant attorney' general on June 9, 1938, was based upon the decision that had been rendered in State ex rel. Caladera v. Restiva, 149 La. 462, 89 So. 425, which in turn was founded upon the provisions of the Constitution of 1913. In that Constitution the jurisdiction of the district courts throughout the state, except in the Parish of Orleans, was defined in Article 109, and did not include the jurisdiction or authority to “require bonds to keep the peace”. That authority was vested then only in justices of the peace. But in the corresponding section of the Constitution of 1921, section 35 of Article 7, defining the jurisdiction of the district courts throughout the state, except in the Parish of Orleans, there was added the words, “and may require bonds to keep the peace.” Hence there is no doubt now about the jurisdiction or authority of the judges of the district courts throughout the state to require peace bonds in proper cases. The method of procedure in such cases is prescribed in Article 27 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, referring to the district judges throughout the state — thus:

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Bluebook (online)
29 So. 2d 162, 210 La. 1080, 1946 La. LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bordelon-la-1946.