Nugent v. State

18 Ala. 521
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 18 Ala. 521 (Nugent v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nugent v. State, 18 Ala. 521 (Ala. 1850).

Opinion

DARGAN, C. J.

1. 2. By the act of the 3d February .1846, a court was established in the city of Mobile by the name of the Criminal Court for Mobile county, which was invested with jurisdiction, concurrent with that of the Circuit Courts of the State, in the administration of the criminal law in the county of Mobile, and the judgments of this court were made revisable by the Supreme Court, in the same manner as were the judgments of the Circuit Courts. By the act of the 11th February 1850, the jurisdiction of this court was enlarged, and the same jurisdiction that had been possessed by the respective County Courts, except the jurisdiction relating to matters of probate and administration, was confered upon it. By another act passed at the same session of the Legislature, the name of this court was changed from the Criminal Court for Mobile county, to that of the City Court of Mobile. Neither the act of 1846, nor that of 1850, make any provision, by which the judgments or sentences of this court can be reviewed by the Circuit Court; they can be reviewed, reversed or corrected, only by the Supreme Court. Hence it is contended that the City Court of Mobile is not an inferior court, according to the sense of that term as used in the first section of the 5th article of the constitution of this State, and consequently that the court, as organised, is unconstitutional, and the conviction of the prisoner, erroneous and void. The language of the first section of the 5th article of the constitution is as follows : “The jndicial power of this State shall be vested in one Supreme Court, Circuit Courts, to be held in each county in the State, and such inferior courts of law and equity, to consist of not more than five members, as the Genera! Assembly may from time to lime direct, ordain and establish.” Whether the City Court of Mobile is an inferior court, accord[524]*524itig to the meaning of this clause of the constitution, is the question. An inferior court, according to the technical meaning of the term, is one, the judgments of which, standing alone, are mere nullities, and in order to give them validity their proceedings must show their jurisdiction. — Kemp’s Lessees v. Kennedy, 5 Cranch 173, 10 Wheat. 192. But all courts, from which an appeal or writ of error lies, are inferior courts in relation to the court before which their judgments may be carried, and by which they may be reviewed, annulled, or affirmed. — Ex parte Tobias Watkins, 3 Pet. 205. It is in this latter sense that the framers of our constitution used the words inferior courts. They meant thereby courts, whose judgments could be reviewed, and their errors corrected by another and a higher tribunal. The City Court of Mobile answers this description, for its judgments can be brought before the Supreme Court, in the same manner that the judgments of the Circuit Courts may be, and if found to be erroneous, can be reversed or annulled. The constitution does not designate the court, before which the judgments and decrees of the inferior courts should be brought. It onlj contemplates that the courts which should be established by the Legislature, besides the Supreme and Circuit Courts, must be inferior courts, that is, that their judgments and decrees must be subject to the revision of a.higher tribunal. It, therefore, follows that any court, so organised by the Legislature that its judgments may be reviewed by appeal or writ of error, either to the Supreme or Circuit Court, is an inferior court within the meaning of the constitution. The adjective inferior, as used in this clause of the constitution, is applicable to, and designates the character of all courts the Legislature is constitutionally authorised to establish, as well courts of equity as of law. But we think it would be admitted that the Legislature could rightfully create inferior courts «of equity, without giving the Circuit Courts any supervisory control over them; for the 8lhsection of the same article of the constitution expressly enables the General Assembly to establish courts of equity with original and appellate jurisdiction, and provides that until the establishment of such courts, the equity jurisdiction should be vested in the circuit judges, and further provides that the judges of the Circuit Courts should have power to issue writs of injunction returnable into the courts of chancery. This clause of the constitution [525]*525evidently contemplates that, after the establishment of courts of chancery by the Legislature, the Circuit Courts should have no equity jurisdiction, save only to issue writs of injunction returnable into the Chancery Courts, and we cannot believe that the framers of the constitution intended to give the Circuit Courts a supervisory control over such inferior courts of equity, as the Legislature might see proper to create, and at the same time to take from the Circuit Courts all equity jurisdiction. In providing for the organization of separate courts of chancery, with original and appellate jurisdiction, and thereby divesting the Circuit Courts of all equity jurisdiction, except the authority to grant injunction, it was the manifest intent to deprive the Circuit Courts of all equity jurisdiction after the establishment of courts of chancery, as well supervisory or appellate as original. An inferior court of equity may, therefore, be created by the Legislature, over which the Circuit Courts have no authority or control. Still it would be an inferior court, within the meaning of the first section of the 5th article of the constitution ; an inferior court in the sense, as if it were a court of law, that is, a court, the decrees of which were subject to be reviewed by a higher tribunal. Thus we see that it could not have been intended to subject inferior courts of equity to the appellate jurisdiction of the Circuit Courts, and that a court of equity may be an inferior court within the meaning of the Constitution, although its judgments and decrees are without the authority or supervisory control of the Circuit Courts. If an inferior court of equity may be so created, without violating the constitution, an inferior court of law may in like manner, for, in speaking of inferior courts of law and equity, the constitution evidently intends that they should be inferior in the same sense, that is, courts whose judgments and decrees must be liable to the revision of a higher tribunal. The judgments and proceedings of the City Court of Mobile are subject to the revision of the Supreme Court of the State. This makes it an inferior court, within the meaning of the constitution. It is, therefore, a constitutional court, in which the prisoner might be lawfully indicted and convicted.

S. We think the court clearly mistook the' law, in refusing to permit the accused to prove that before, and near the time of committing the alleged offence, other persons had carnal knowledge of the girl, upon whom the offence is charged to have been [526]*526committed) inasmuch as the State had previously proved that she was infected with venereal disease, and the parts were bruised and inflamed. The existence of the disease and the injury to her person were facts corroborative of the testimony of the girl, for they tended strongly to show that some one had attempted to have sexual intercourse with her, and it was certainly competent for tile prisoner to show that these facts could have existed consistently with his innocence; for such proof would to some extent weaken the presumption of guilt, that would result from the existence of the disease and the injuries to her person.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilburn v. State
545 So. 2d 231 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama, 1989)
Ex parte Graham
95 So. 2d 390 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1957)
Mercer v. Mercer
49 So. 2d 670 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1950)
Ex Parte State Ex Rel. Carmichael
36 So. 2d 457 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1948)
People v. Cellura
284 N.W. 643 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1939)
Patterson v. State
175 So. 371 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1937)
People v. Russell
216 N.W. 441 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1927)
State v. Ballamah
210 P. 391 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1922)
Cole v. Marvin
193 P. 828 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1920)
Smith v. State
72 So. 316 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1916)
Ex Rel. Bergeron v. Co. Court of Travis Cty.
174 S.W. 365 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1915)
State v. Apley
141 N.W. 740 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)
People v. Long
27 N.Y. Crim. 271 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)
Kidwell v. United States
38 App. D.C. 566 (D.C. Circuit, 1912)
Ex parte Louisville & Nashville R. R.
58 So. 315 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1912)
State ex rel. Vandiver v. Burke
57 So. 870 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1911)
Bader v. State
122 S.W. 555 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1909)
Ex Parte A. Abrams
120 S.W. 863 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1908)
Ensley Development Co. v. Powell
40 So. 137 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1906)
State v. Height
59 L.R.A. 437 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Ala. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nugent-v-state-ala-1850.