Sanders v. State

55 Ala. 42
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 55 Ala. 42 (Sanders 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
Sanders v. State, 55 Ala. 42 (Ala. 1876).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J. —

It is insisted for the appellant, that the act “to establish a Court of Quarter Sessions for Perry county,” is violative of the constitution, because it confers on that court jurisdiction coextensive with that of the Circuit Court, and it is not, therefore, an inf mor court, which the general assembly has power to establish. The present constitution vests the judicial power of the State “in the senate, sitting as a court of impeachment, a supreme court, [44]*44circuit courts, chancery courts, courts of probate, such inferior courts of lato and equity, to consist of not more than five members, as the general assembly may from time to time establish, and such persons as may be by law invested with judicial power.” The jurisdiction of the senate, sitting as a court of impeachment, is defined, as is that of the Supreme and Circuit Courts. The ninth section of the same article of the constitution declares, that the general assembly shall establish in each county a court of probate, “for the granting of letters testamentary, and of administration, and for orphans’ business.” The jurisdiction of the courts of chancery, and of the inferior courts of law and equity which the general assembly may establish, is undefined.

The constitution of 1819 declared, that the judicial power of the State should be vested in “ one supreme court, circuit courts, and such inferior courts of law and equity as the general assembly may from time to time establish.” The senate was .clothed with exclusive jurisdiction of impeachments. The jurisdiction of the Supreme and Circuit Courts was defined substantially as in the present constitution, except the jurisdiction of impeachments, now conferred on these courts. In the distribution of the judicial power of the State, that constitution contemplated the establishment by the general assembly of courts of chancery, having, so far as was suitable to our institutions and jurisprudence, the jurisdiction pertaining to such courts in the older States, and in England. The general assembly, as in the present constitution, was authorized to establish in each county courts of probate, having the jurisdiction expressed in the present constitution. Long prior to the formation of the present constitution, these courts had been established, their jurisdiction defined, and from time to time enlarged or diminished by legislation. It is to these courts, as established and existing, the present constitution refers in its distribution of the judicial power; while their establishment, and distribution to them of judicial power, was contemplated and authorized by the constitution of 1819. This reference in the present constitution to existing courts, which the constitution of 1819 intended should be established, does not authorize the supposition that it was intended to enlarge or narrow the power, conferred by both constitutions on the general assembly, to establish inferior courts of law and equity.

In Nugent v. State, 18 Ala. 521, it was declared, that an inferior court, which the general assembly had power to establish, was not an inferior court, as that term was often used at common law — a court, the judgments or decrees of which, standing alone, unsupported by the recital in its [45]*45records of the facts on which its jurisdiction depended, were mere nullities; but an inferior court, because of its relation to a higher tribunal, haying jurisdiction, on writ of error, or appeal, to revise its decrees or judgments. That decision . was made twenty-seven years ago; and in each of the successive changes of constitution, made within the last seventeen years, the grant of power to the general assembly, to establish inferior courts, has been expressed in the same terms as in the constitution of 1819. Successive legislatures, under each of the several constitutions, have, in the exercise of the power, established such courts; inferior, not in jurisdiction, but because their judgments or decrees were the subject of revision in this court. Constitutional conventions, legislative bodies, and this court, have acquiesced in and recognized this decision, as a final, conclusive exposition of the power of the general assembly; and we could not, if we were inclined, depart from it. It affirms the power of the general assembly to establish the Court of Quarter Sessions, with jurisdiction concurrent with that of the Circuit Court, and such other jurisdiction as the general assembly may deem it expedient to confer.

2. The plea of autrefois convict was interposed to each count of the indictment; and, without objection, was tried by the court, without the intérvention of a jury. The judgment of the court, overruling the plea, is sought to be revised. The ninth section of the act creating the court, authorizes this mode of trial, if consented to by the State and the defendant. It is not necessary, in this case, to determine whether the judgment of the court could be affirmed, if we concurred in its correctness. It is better, in a criminal case, that all issues of fact be submitted to, and determined by a jury; and it may be a delicate inquiry, whether the consent of the accused can dispense with a trial by jury, if a jury is a constituent of the court, or if there is no appeal to a higher tribunal, of which a jury is a constituent. We pass the consideration of this question, until its decision is necessary.

3. The indictment contains two counts; the first charging an assault and battery on Lewis Massey, with a weapon, without describing it; the second charging the same offense, with a chain. The indictment, on which the former conviction was had, charged the defendant with maltreatment of said Massey, a convict sentenced to hard labor for the county, and hired to the defendant, by chaining him ■ to a plow. Each indictment was found by the same grand jury, on the same evidence, and returned .as a true bill, at the same time. The solicitor framing them testified, that he framed each indictment to cover the same transaction, because he doubted [46]*46tbe propriety of joining counts for an assault and battery in tbe indictment for maltreatment; therefore, tbe present indictment was framed, charging, as was bis practice, in tbe first count, tbe assault and battery to have been committed with a weapon generally, and in tbe second count designating specially tbe description of tbe weapon. He was in doubt whether tbe proof would, in legal contemplation, support tbe averment, in tbe indictment for maltreatment, that Massey was a convict hired to the defendant. He communicated bis opinions to the grand jury. There was, probably, before tbe grand jury some evidence that tbe defendant, before chaining Massey to the plow, bad stricken him one or two blows with his fists. It is apparent, however, that neither the present indictment, nor the former, was found on that evidence.

The maltreatment, charged in tbe former indictment, necessarily involved an assault and battery — the infliction of unlawful violence on the person of the convict. It is, equally with an assault and battery, a misdemeanor; and tbe only difference in punishment is, that thq fine for it can not be less than fifty dollars, while for an assault and battery tbe fine may be less, if tbe jury so determine. Tfre-fine for neither can exceed five hundred dollars, and each may be visited with imprisonment, or bard labor for the county, for a term not exceeding six months.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Ala. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-state-ala-1876.