Molitor v. State

3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 445
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 445 (Molitor v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Molitor v. State, 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 445 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

CALDWELL, J.

The plaintiff in error was charged in the police court, under the Dow law, with keeping his place where he sold liquors during week days open on Sunday wdth intent to sell. He was tried, convicted and sentenced in the police court, and thereupon he prosecuted error‘in the court of common pleas, wherein he averred there was error.

1. In that the warrant for his arrest was not issued by the acting judge, but was issued by the clerk of the court, and that sec. 1804, authorizing the clerk to issue the warrant, is unconstitutional.

2. That the court erred in permitting jurors drawn in another case to sit in his case, against his objection, after he had requested that he might be present and witness the drawing of the jury by which he was to be tried, and that seven of the persons composing the jury that tried him were placed on the jury without his being permitted to see their names drawn from the box or wheel.

3. That the judge of said court erred in ruling and .holding in said case that he was a judge duly appointed and qualified to sit in the trial of said cause, and that the statute under which he was appointed is constitutional.

4. That the court erred in its charge to the jury wherein it defined to the jury what is meant by “reasonable doubt,” and also as to what is meant by defendant keeping his place of business open.

The court of common pleas found no error in said case, affirmed the judgment, and remanded the cause. Now the plaintiff in error prosecutes error to this court, wherein he claims said court of common pleas erred in its ruling in said case. This makes it necessary to decide the law involved in the foregoin'g allegations of error.

i. Is sec. 1804, Rev. Stat. 1880, unconstitutional? That section gives power to the clerk of the police court, when an affidavit is filed with him charging any person with the commission of an offense, to issue a warrant under the seal of the court for the arrest of the accused. It is claimed this violates the Fourth Amendment of the constitution of the U. S., and also sec. 4, article 1, of the constitution of Ohio. They provide that warrants shall issue only upon probable cause, and it is contended that determining “probable cause” is a judi[446]*446cial act, and not a ministerial act, and hence it is unconstitutional to devolve that duty upon a ministerial officer. This claim cannot be sustained, because issuing, a warrant in a case like this is a ministerial act. Place v. Taylor, 22 O. S., 317; State ex rel v. Burgoyne, 7 O. S., 153; Duncker v. Salomon, 21 Wis., 621.

An act is none the less ministerial because the person performing it may-have to satisfy himself of certain facts before his duty can be performed. Ray v. City, 90 Ind., 572; 17 Ind., 169; 3 Conn., 107; 12 Conn., 463.

2. Did the court err in permitting seven jurors to sit in the case who had been theretofore drawn to sit in another case? By the court ruling that these seven jurors were competent to sit in the case, the plaintiff in error was deprived of being present when their names were drawn.

Sec. 1798 provides that the jurors of the police court shall be selected, summoned and impaneled in accordance with an ordinance of the council, or if no such ordinance is. in force, in accordance with a rule of the court. Section 733 of the city ordinances provides, that whenever the clerk shall be directed by the court to cause to be summoned any number of persons as jurors in said court, he shall at once, in the presence of the judge and an officer of the force, not lower in rank than lieutenant, and in the presence of such person interested in the cause for which the jury is drawn, as may desire to be present, proceed to turn the wheel until the pieces of paper are thoroughly mixed, and he shall then, in the presence of said persons, draw from said wheel, one by one, the number of names specified in the order, etc.
Sec. 735 provides that jtirors thus drawn, etc., for the trial of any cause, may be required to serve as jurors in the trial of any other cause during the term at which they are spmmoned, etc.

The meaning of these sections is clear. The court may have, when a case is to be tried, jurors, six, seven, or any number less than a full jury, who have been drawn according to sec. 733; he may then have drawn for that cause any number of names to complete a jury, and a party interested would be entitled to be present at the drawing of those names, but by sec. 735 it appears that he is not expected to be present when the jurors were drawn who were at the service of the court when jurors are drawn to complete the jury for his case. There was, then, no error in the procuring of the jury.

3. We see no error in the charge of the court. The phrase, “reasonable doubt,” as defined by the court, was not in the phraseology of the books, but was clear, and was as favorable to the plaintiff in error as the definition given generally by the courts.

The charge as to what is a closing of his place of business is the same irs substance as that recently approved by the supreme court of Ohio.

4. The question most urged as error on the hearing of this case is the one as to the constitutionality of the appointment of the judge before whom the case was tried in the police court.

Sec. 1802 Rev. Stat., is as follows: “During the absence, inability or disability of the judge, the mayor may hold the court, or he may select for the purpose a reputable member of the bar, or a justice of the peace residing within the city, who shall have the jurisdiction and powers conferred upon judges of police courts, be styled acting police judge, and, as such, sign all process and records during the time he shall serve, and ’perform all other acts pertaining to the office,” etc.

Under this law the mayor of the city appointed C. W. Coates to hold the court, and as he was proceeding to hear this case, the question was in various ways raised for his decision as to whether he was a judge; as to whether he had any jurisdiction as a judge to try or sentence the accused. It is now urged that the court of common pleas erred in sustaining the holdings of C. W. Coates, that he was the lawfully “acting police judge,” and had jurisdiction to preside as such at said trial; and it is urged that said statute is contrary to sections 10 and 13 of art. IV. of the constitution of Ohio. The court of common pleas held that the provisions of the constitution have no application to casual, temporary absences and appointments to serve only a. short time as judge. This may be, as it has been urged, a very poor reason for holding that C. W. Coates was qualified to sit as a judge in said case. Yet, if the conclusion is right, we should sustain [447]*447it, even if the court below gave a very poor and erroneous reason for his conclusion. In Ex parte Strang, 21 O. S., 610, the supreme court had this same statute under consideration. It held: “The acts of an officer de facto, when questioned collaterally, are as binding as those of an officer de jure.” Mr. Coates was a judge de facto according to this decision of the supreme court. If his right to sit as judge has been questioned collaterally, then an attempt was made to raise a. question that could not be thus raised. In ex parte Strang, supra, the question arose by way of petition in a proceeding in habeas corpus

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molitor-v-state-ohcirctcuyahoga-1892.