Jones v. Morris

33 S.E. 377, 97 Va. 43, 1899 Va. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 30, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 33 S.E. 377 (Jones v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Morris, 33 S.E. 377, 97 Va. 43, 1899 Va. LEXIS 9 (Va. 1899).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 8th of April, 1897, A. O. Jones sued out a warrant of arrest, in the city of Newport News, charging that J. O. Morris of the city of Richmond in the said city “ did unlawfully, $40 in current money of the United States of the goods and chattels of the said A. O. Jones, of the value of $40, take, steal and carry away.” Upon this warrant Morris was arrested on the 10th of April of the same year; was, by the justice before whom the warrant was returnable, committed to a policeman of the city of Richmond, and was by the latter carried to the said city, and, on the 12th of April, upon trial before the Police Justice of the said city, acquitted and discharged. Thereupon Monis instituted a suit against Jones for malicious prosecution, and upon the trial the jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $1,500, which is before us upon a writ of error sued out by the defendant.

The first error assigned is that the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration and to each count thereof, should have been sustained.

The second assignment of error is to the action of the court in not excluding from the consideration of the jury the warrant offered in evidence, on which the plaintiff was tried in the Police Oourt of the city of Richmond, and also all evidence relating to the trial referred to in bill of exception No. 1.

These two assignments of error may be considered together. The point presented for consideration is as follows:

Morris was arrested upon a warrant sued out by a Justice of the Peace of the city of Newport News, charging him with an offence committed in the city of Richmond. When he was brought before the justice who issued the warrant it was his duty, under section 3959 of the Code, to commit the accused by warrant to an officer “ who shall by virtue thereof carry him to the county or corporation in which the trial should be, and [47]*47there shall take him before and return such warrant to a justice thereof unless otherwise provided.”

Mow the contention of the plaintiff in error is that inasmuch as no warrant was issued by the justice in Mewport Mews, authorizing the conveyance of the prisoner to the city of Richmond for trial, the Police Justice of the last mentioned city acquired no jurisdiction over the accused, and the offence alleged tó have been committed by him; that the proceedings before the Justice in Richmond were wholly without jurisdiction, the judgment rendered by him a nullity, the prosecution instituted not as yet finally ended, and therefore an essential requisite to an action for malicious prosecution absent in this case. It may be conceded for the sake of argument, and to that extent only does the court commit itself, that Morris had the right to challenge the authority of the officer by whom he was taken from Mewport Mews to Richmond for trial; that in the absence of a warrant, such as is provided for in section 3959, he was unlawfully deprived of his liberty; that the proeeéding before Justice Crutchfield was, in the absence of such a warrant, irregular, and that upon objection taken by Morris an adverse judgment would have been erroneous, and subject to be reversed upon writ of error. The fact remains that the Police Justice of the city of Richmond had ample, indeed, exclusive jurisdiction of the offence. The accused was present in court, made no objection to the trial, and if judgment had been rendered against him, would have been held to have waived any irregularity. It appears from the evidence, and indeed from the very terms of the assignment pf error presented by the plaintiff in error, that Morris was tried in the Police Court of the city of Richmond upon the warrant issued in Mewport Mews which sufficiently describes the offence with which he was charged. The evidence in support of it was fully presented to the trial court, which very properly rendered a judgment in favor of the accused. That was a final end to the prosecution for the alleged offence. Morris was put [48]*48in jeopardy before a justice having jurisdiction over his person, and over the subject matter of the crime with which he was charged, and his guilt or innocence cán never again be called in question upon that charge.

“ Jurisdiction comes solely from the law, in no degree from the consent of litigants. So that neither consent nor anything else can authorize a court to act in a cause outside the sphere which the law has ordained for it. But where the_subject matter is within the cognizance of the tribunal, and the right to take jurisdiction of it in the particular instance depends on facts in pais,'—such as the residence of parties, and others within the like reason,—consent will, in the absence of any special circumstance forbidding, establish the required fact, the same as would the verdict of a jury; so that, in such a case, there may be waiver.” Bishop on Grim. Procedure, (4th ed.), sec. 124.

We are of opinion that these assignments of error are insufficient.

Bor like reasons we are of opinion that the objection to the form of the warrant cannot be maintained. “A warrant,” says Bishop, Yol. 1, p. 187, “ need not set out the crime with the fullness of an indictment, but it should contain a reasonable indication thereof. Minor defects will not render it inadequate as a justification to the officer.” It is true, that the warrant in this case charges that Morris unlawfully did take, steal and carry away money of the value of $40. It omits to charge that it was done feloniously, and we are not concerned to say that that word ought not properly to have appeared in it, or if objected to by Morris the warrant might not for that reason have been considered defective. The fact remains that no objection was taken; that the whole subject was investigated, and judgment of acquittal rendered. That judgment, we repeat, is a complete bar to any prosecution for the same offence.

Another assignment of error is to the giving of instructions offered by the plaintiff set out in bill of exception Mo. 2. The [49]*49objection taken to the first instruction is to the closing sentence, in which the court states to the jury that “ if they believe from the evidence that the defendant did not make a full, correct, and honest disclosure of all such facts to his counsel, but that he instituted the criminal prosecution from a fixed determination of his own, rather than from the opinion of counsel, then such advice can avail nothing in this suit.” The objection is that there is no evidence to support this statement of the law. Any evidence tending to prove a fact is sufficient to justify the court in giving an instruction applicable to it, if requested so to do, even though the evidence is so slight as to be insufficient to support a verdict founded upon it. Washington &c. R. Co. v. Lacey, 94 Va. 460, and authorities there cited. The defence chiefly relied upon before the jury is that the defendant had made a full disclosure of the facts connected with this transaction to his counsel, and had acted upon his advice. There is evidence, it seems ho us, that there was a predetermined intention upon the part of the plaintiff in error to institute this action, and that the real question submitted to counsel was as to the jurisdiction of the justice of the city of Newport News to decide it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 S.E. 377, 97 Va. 43, 1899 Va. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-morris-va-1899.