Rhyne v. . Lipscombe

29 S.E. 57, 122 N.C. 650, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 22, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 57 (Rhyne v. . Lipscombe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhyne v. . Lipscombe, 29 S.E. 57, 122 N.C. 650, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 323 (N.C. 1898).

Opinions

Clark, J.:

The Constitution, Article IV, Section 2, establishes the Supreme Court, Superior Courts and Justices of the Peace, and authorizes the Legislature to create other courts inferior to the Supreme Court. Section 12 of the same article provides that the General Assembly shall have ño power to deprive the Judicial Department of any power or jurisdiction which rightfully pertains to it, hut that it ‘ ‘ shall allot' and distribute that portion of this power and jurisdiction, which does not pertain to the Supreme Court, among the other courts prescribed in this Constitution, or which may be established by law, in such manner as it may deem best .so far as the same may he done withoitt conflict with other provisions of this Constitution.”

Under the Constitution of the United States, Article III, Section 1, the Supreme Court alone is created, and all other courts are the creatures of Congress, hence Congress has created and abolished districts, and also created and abolished a system of circuit courts at will. But under our State Constitution the Superior Courts and courts of the Justice of the Peace are created by the Constitution itself, and the General Assembly cannot abolish them. The term £ £ superior court ” had a well defined signification at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, and the language of that instrument [653]*653must'be taken as referring thereto. The Superior Court was considered of so much importance that, by Sections 10, 11 and 21, Article IV, thevpeople are guaranteed the right to elect the judges,‘their terms are fixed, audit was provided that'each judge thereof shall reside in the district for which he is elected,'lihat the judges shall rotate, and thaUno judge thereof shall hold the courts of the same district oftener than once in four years, and that arteast two terms thereof shall be held annually in each county, and by" Section 22 .these Superior Courts shall at all times be open for the transaction of all business except the trial of issues of fact by a jury. Sections 16 and 23 give the people the right to elect the solicitors and clerks of said court,' and also fixes their terms. While the General Assembly is given the power to allot and distribute the jurisdiction of the courts below the Supreme Court, this is with the important limitation that it must be done ‘‘ without conflict with oth-¿r provisions of this Constitution.” This renders it essential to consider what is the inherent nature of the Superior Courts created by those “other provisions” of the Constitution itself, which treats them with so much consideration, prescribing the election and terms of whose officers, besides the other provisions above recited. The General Assembly may allot and distribute the jurisdiction below the Supreme Court, but it cannot in doing so create new courts with substantially the same powers as the Superior Courts and make the officials .thereof elective otherwise than by the people, subject to be abolished by legislative enactment, and hence without independent tenure of office as prescribed by the Constitution and freed from the provisions as to rotation, the residence of the judges and the requirements as to two.terms annually in each county, and being always [654]*654open. All this cannot be done simply by creating new Superior Courts, styling them “Circuit Courts” or “Criminal Courts” or otherwise.

' The United States Constitution, 6th and Tth Amendments, provide for the right of trial by jury in the United States Courts. It has been held that the word ‘ * jury”must be interpreted in the sense it had at the time of the adoption of those amendments, and, hence, that in the Federal courts a jury must consist of 12 men and their verdict must be by unanimity because this was the accepted meaning of the right of trial by jury at that time, notwithstanding this meaning no longer universally attaches as many States provide now for juries less than twelve and have abolished the requirement of unanimous verdicts. Am. Pub. Co., v. Fisher, 166 U. S. 464. This has also been held under the State Constitutions which provide for trial by jury, except in those States whose constitutions expressly permit juries less than 12 or dispense with the common law requirement of unanimity. Cooley Const. Lim. (6th Ed.) 390, 395 and cases therein cited; 1 B. & H. O. R. Cases, 482 and notes.

Applying this reasonable and settled rule of construction to the Superior Court established by the Constitution, and fenced about, as its importance demanded, by so many provisions in tbe Constitution, what was the “Superior Court” as the term was well understood at the time of the adoption of the Constitution ? It meant the highest court in the State, next to the Supreme Court and superior to all others, from which alone appeals lay direct to the Supreme Court, and possessed of general jurisdiction, criminal as well as civil and both in law and equity. It cannot be deprived of that superiority and pre-eminence, or deprived of either its criminal or civil jurisdiction without conflict with the constitu[655]*655tional provisions creating it. That jurisdiction may be made largely appellate by conferring such part of "its original jurisdiction on inferior- courts as the G-eneral Assembly may provide but it cannot retrench the .extent of its jurisdiction which it must retain either by original or appellate process. It is made flexible, so that more than two terms can be held in each county annually if the General Assembly thinks proper which can also increase the number of the Superior Court judges with the increase of population and legal business in the State, but when they are increased all the officers of such courts must be elected by the people at the next general election and they must hold for the fixed term named in the Constitution .and the judges must rotate in regular succession. The constitutional guarantees and the inherent nature and general jurisdiction of the Superior Court, recognized by the historical and legal meaning of the term at the adoption of the constitution, can not be held revoked and discarded by the incidental authority to the legislature to create criminal courts in cities and “ other inferior courts ” (which the Constitution did not deem of enough importance even to name) and to allot the jurisdiction among them. Even this provision is guarded, as already stated, by the requirement that the allotment shall not conflict with the other provisions of the Constitution. Nor can the allotment be such as to take from the Justices of the Peace the jurisdiction conferred by Section 21 of Article IV., nor to repeal the right given by that section, of appeal both in criminal and civil actions to the Superior Court from the court of Justices of the Peace. There are these restrictions and the further inherent one, as above stated, that the Superior Court is at the head of the court system below the Supreme Court and that from it alone [656]*656appeals can come up to this court. Prom the Inferior Courts therefore appeals must go to the Superior Court of the county and not direct to this Court. Subject to these constitutional restrictions, the G-eneral Assembly may allot the jurisdiction below the Supreme Court.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 57, 122 N.C. 650, 1898 N.C. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhyne-v-lipscombe-nc-1898.