Rhinehart v. Lance

43 N.J.L. 311
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 43 N.J.L. 311 (Rhinehart v. Lance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhinehart v. Lance, 43 N.J.L. 311 (N.J. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Depue, J.

The object of the demurrer is to raise the question whether a justice of the peace sitting in the court for the trial of small causes has power to commit for a contempt committed in the presence of the court while engaged in the trial of a civil cause. The commitment of the plaintiff was for the period of ten days, for the contempt adjudged against him.

It must be conceded that the plaintiff’s conduct, as averred in the plea, was outrageously improper, and that if he so misconducted himself he deserved the punishment he received. But we must not, by our disapprobation of the plaintiff’s conduct, or by the justice of the punishment he received, be led away from the real question in issue—the power of a justice of the peace to commit for contempts when sitting in the court for the trial of small causes. If the power in question resides in the class of judicial officers to which the defendant belongs, it is a power which may be exercised for a less flagrant offence, and followed by an imprisonment for a year, or a longer term, as well as for a single day, without its exercise being subject to revision or review, except in mere mattei’s of form.

The power to commit at discretion and for a discretionary term of imprisonment is a transcendent prerogative power. [313]*313“The power which the courts in "Westminster Hall,” said Wilmot, C. J., “have of vindicating their own authority, is coeval with their first foundation. * * * I have carefully examined to see if I could find out any vestiges or traces of its introduction, but can find none. It is as ancient as any other part of the common law.” Rex v. Almon, Wilmot’s Opinions 254. It seems to have had its foundation on the theory that contempt in the presence of, or of the authority of, the king’s courts, was a contempt of the royal authority itself.

At common law the power to punish, by fine or imprisonment, contempts, even such as were committed in faeie enrice, was given to courts of record only. In 30 Eliz. it was resolved that if any contempt or disturbance to the court be committed in any court of record, the judges might set upon the offender a reasonable fine; but that courts which are not of record cannot impose a fine or commit to prison. Griesley’s case, 8 Co. 75 ; Godfrey’s case, 11 Co. 43 b. None but courts of record can either fine or imprison; hence, when any new authority is constituted with power to fine and imprison, the persons invested with such authority become a court of record. Groenvelt v. Burwell, 1 Comyn 79. Mr. Hawkins expressly lays it down that only such courts as are courts of record may fine or imprison for contempts in the face of the court. 3 Hawk. 5, §§ 14, 15. All courts of record are the king’s courts, in right of his crown and royal dignity, and therefore every court of record has authority to fine or imprison for contempt of its authority; but the courts not of record—or those, at least, in which the common law is administered—are of inferior dignity, and in a less proper sense the king’s courts, and therefore are not entrusted by the law with the power to fine or imprison, unless by the express provision of some act of parliament. 3 Steph. Com. 383, 384.

Expressions are frequently used in the books distinguishing between superior and inferior courts, 'which are erroneously cited in support of the power of inferior courts, not of record, to commit for contempt. This classification of courts of [314]*314record is made by Sir Matthew Hale. He says: “ The courts are of two kinds: 1. Courts of record; 2. Not of record. First. Of courts of record there is this diversity, viz.: 1, supreme; 2, superior; 3, inferior.” The latter he styles inferior courts of record. Hale’s Analysis of the Law 35, 36 ; Bac. Ab., “ Courts,” D, 1. This distinction is commented on by counsel and by Erie, C. J., and Willes, J., in In re Fernandez, 10 C. B. (N. S.) 3, 27—41, and concerns only the question as to the power summarily to punish contempts committed extra curiam as well as in facie curiae, and the form and contents of the process of commitment. In re Sheriff of Middlesex, 11 A. & E. 273; Ex parte Pater, 5 B. & S. 299. It has no pertinency to the power of inferior courts, which are not courts of record, to commit for either cause.

I do not find in the English cases any judicial adoption of a principle so broad, as that power to fine or imprison for con-tempts is necessarily inherent in every court of justice, without regard to the grade or constitution of the court. The claim by Sir William Bláckstone of such a power as resulting from the first principle of judicial establishments was made only, in behalf of the supreme courts of justice, as an inseparable attendant upon every superior tribunal. 4 Bl. Com. 286. The passage so often quoted from the opinion of Chief Justice Wilmot, in Rex v. Almon, supra, that such a power is a necessary incident of every court of justice, whether of record or not, was manifestly designed to have no broader application. The Chief Justice cites Sparks v. Martyn, 1 Vent. 1, which was an application to the King’s Bench for a prohibition to restrain the Court of Admiralty from enforcing an attachment for a contempt for taking a ship and taking the sails from it; from an officer who was executing the process of the court against the ship. The King’s Bench denied the prohibition, saying that the Court of Admiralty may punish one that resists the process of the court, and may fine and imprison for a contempt to the court acted in the face of the court, though it be no court of record. The High Court of Admiralty was among the most ancient of [315]*315the English courts. “The admiral and Court of Admiralty have been time out of mind, and so it was said in the time of Richard I.” Com. Dig., “ Admiralty,” A. Its jurisdiction was civil and criminal. On the criminal side it had cognizance of piracy and of murder, and all felonies committed on the high seas. As a criminal court it possessed most extensive powers, including the power to pronounce sentence of death. Com. Dig., “Admiralty,” E. As a civil court, by the custom of the court, it had power to amerce the defendant for his default, at its discretion, and to make execution thereof upon his goods, and for want of goods to take his body. 2 Bac. Ab. 746; the case of The Admiralty, 13 Co. 52. Inasmuch as its proceedings were according to the method of the civil law, for that reason it was not considered as a court of record. 3 Bl. Com. 69. But it had, by its constitution, the essential attribute of a court of record—power to fine and imprison—and, in the magnitude of its jurisdiction, was on an equality with the courts at Westminster Hall. The court had all the qualities of a court of record, except that its procedure being regulated by its own peculiar laws and usages, its sentences, for technical reasons, were not considered as its record.

It is entirely clear that among courts proceeding according to the common law, the power of summarily punishing con- . tempts depended upon whether or not the court was a court of record. The most recent English case on the subject, was argued and decided upon that assumption. Queen v. Lefroy, L. R., 8 Q. B. 134. This court, in Ex parte Kerrigan, 4 Vroom

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.J.L. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhinehart-v-lance-nj-1881.