Jackson v. State

29 Ark. 62
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 Ark. 62 (Jackson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. State, 29 Ark. 62 (Ark. 1874).

Opinion

English, C. J.

In January, 1874, Cynthia Lane made complaint before a justice of the peace of Washington county, that she had been delivered of a bastard male child, of which Everett Jackson was the father; whereupon a warrant was issued for the arrest of the accused, to answer the complaint. On the trial, the birth of the child, and that Jackson was its father, being proven to the satisfaction of the magistrate, he ordered the accused to enter into bond, as prescribed by the statute, and adjudged him to pay five dollars for the lying-in expenses of the mother, and two dollars a month for the maintenance of the child, from its birth, Nov. 17, 1873, until it should become seven years of age, if it should so long live, etc.

Jackson appealed to the circuit court, where the cause was tried by a jury, on the plea of not guilty, and he was found guilty of being the father of the bastard child, etc., as charged, and the judgment of the justice of the peace affirmed. He filed motions in arrest of judgment, and for a new trial, which were overruled, and he excepted, and appealed to this court.

No question of law was reserved at the trial. The new trial was asked on the ground that the finding of the jury was contrary to the evidence.

. The prosecutrix swore very positively that the appellant was the father of the child, stating the times and place when and where he had intercourse with her, and the date, etc., of the birth of the child.

The appellant attempted to prove that other men had intercourse with the prosecutrix, and that she was unworthy of credit for want of chastity. But the witnesses were all before the jury, and it was their province and not ours to pass upon the weight of evidence; and, the presiding judge having refused a new trial, and there being no total want of evidence to sustain any material allegation of the complaint, we shall not disturb the verdict.

The appellant filed, with his motion for a new trial, an affidavit that he had discovered, since the trial, evidence which would establish the fact that the prosecutrix had admitted to one Phillip H. Bobb that appellant was not the father of the child, etc.

Passing over defects in the affidavit of the appellant, it being uncorroborated by the affidavit of some disinterested witness, was insufficient to warrant the granting of a new trial. Pleasant v. The State, 13 Ark., 326; Bixby v. The State, 15 id., 395; White v. The State, 17 id., 404.

The appellant moved in arrest of judgment, “Because the court had no jurisdiction of the prosecution.”

In bastardy cases, the statute gives the accused the right of appeal from the judgment of the justice of the peace before whom the complaint is made and the cause tried, to the circuit court. The appellant took an appeal, and the cause was tried anew in the circuit court in accordance with the statute. If the magistrate had original jurisdiction of the cause, the circuit court had appellate jurisdiction. We have thought proper, in this case, to consider whether justices of the peace had jurisdiction of bastardy cases under the constitution of 1868, which was in force when this prosecution was commenced.

The statute giving'justices of the peace jurisdiction in cases of bastardy, and regulating the manner of prosecuting them, ■was passed February 24, 1838, and became chapter 19 of the revised statutes, title Bastardy. It was passed under the constitution of 1836.

By the constitution of 1836, as originally framed and adopted, justices of the peace were given exclusive original jurisdiction in all matters of contract, except in actions of covenant, where the sum in controversy was of one hundred dollars and under. They had, in no case, jurisdiction to try and determine any criminal case or penal offense against the state, but might sit as examining courts, and might commit, discharge or recognize to the court having jurisdiction for further trial, offenders against the peace, and to bind persons to keep the peace, and for good behavior. Art. Ylj sec. 15.

Bastardy is not a matter of contract, and the statute, providing for proceedings in bastardy cases partaking of the nature of criminal prosecutions, attempted to confer upon justices of the peace a larger jurisdiction than was warranted by the constitution of 1836, as originally adopted.

By an amendment to the constitution of 1836, ratified November 17,1846, the general assembly was authorized to confer such jurisdiction as it might from time to time deem proper, on justices of the peace in all matters of contract, covenants and in actions for the recovery of fines and forfeitures when the amount claimed did not exceed one hundred dollars, and in actions and prosecutions for assaults and battery and other penal offenses less than felony, which might be punishable by fine only. Eng. Dig., 71.

By act of December, 21, 1846, passed after the ratification ■of the above amendment, all laws and parts of laws in the revised statutes relating to the duties of justices of the peace, which were inoperative previous to the adoption of the amendment to the constitution, and which had not been repealed, •etc., were reenacted, revived and declared to be in full force and effect. Eng. Dig., 961.

The bastardy statute was carried into and made chapter 24 of the digest of 1848, with a note by the digester referring to .art. VI, sec. 15 of the constitution of 1836, the above amendment, and reenacting act. Eng. Dig., 211.

The bastardy statute was also carried into and made chapter 24 of the digest of 1858, with a similar note by Mr. Gould, the digester.

In 1855, a bastardy case, which was prosecuted before a justice of the peace of Union county, and taken by appeal to the circuit court, came before this court on appeal. Questions relating to the testimony of the prosecutrix were determined, and the judgment reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. Barnett v. The State, 16 Ark., 530.

The constitution of 1864 expressly gave justices of the peace original jurisdiction in cases of bastardy, as well as in actions for the recovery of fines and forfeitures for limited amounts, and in prosecutions for assault and battery, and ■other penal offenses less than felony, punishable by fine only. Art. VII, sec. 18. And, by a provision of the schedule, all laws in force on the 4th of March, 1861, which had not expired by limitation therein contained, and were not inconsistent with the constitution, were declared to be still in force.

By the constitution of 1868, justices of the peace were given exclusive original jurisdiction in all actions of contract and replevin where the amount in controversy did not exceed two hundred dollars, etc. And, in criminal causes, their jurisdiction was extended to all matters less than felony for final determination and judgment. Art. VII, sec. 20.

And by section five of the same article it was provided that- “ the inferior courts of the state, as now constituted by law, except as hereinafter provided, shall remain with the same jurisdiction as the}'- now possess,” etc.

By act of March 21, 1871, providing for a revision of the-laws, the digester was required to embrace in the digest all the acts of the general assembly, not local or private, etc., nor-repealed, and remaining in force at the completion of the-work, etc.

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Related

State v. Blackburn
33 S.W. 529 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1895)
State ex rel. Washington v. Hunter
67 Ala. 81 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
29 Ark. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-state-ark-1874.