State ex rel. Dowling v. Ray

91 So. 443, 150 La. 1029
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 17, 1922
DocketNo. 25157
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 91 So. 443 (State ex rel. Dowling v. Ray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Dowling v. Ray, 91 So. 443, 150 La. 1029 (La. 1922).

Opinion

By Division A, composed of Chief Justice PROVOST'S and Justices OVERTON and LECHE.

OVERTON, J.

Harry Aston and Philip Bloomfield were -arrested by the police of the city of New Orleans for violating certain ordinances of that city, and were incarcerated in the First Precinct police station.

On the day following their arrest, Richard A. Dowling, judge of division 0 of the criminal district court for the parish of Orleans, issued an order for their release on parole, which order Ray and the police department refused to recognize. At that time no proceeding had been taken before the recorder’s court, the court having original jurisdiction over Aston and Bloomfield, for their release on parole, nor had any appeal been taken in their cases to the criminal district court.

Ray, in his capacity as commissioner of public safety, had issued instructions to the superintendent of police not to recognize orders for parole issued by the judges of the criminal district court on charges for the violation of municipal ordinances, and when he and certain members of that department refused to comply with the order for- the release of Aston and Bloomfield, the judge of division C ruled them to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt.

On the trial Ray was found guilty and was [1033]*1033sentenced to 48 hours in jail. The others were acquitted.

Ray then made application to this court to review, by certiorari, the validity of the proceeding against him for contempt, and for a writ of prohibition -directed to the judge of division C and to the criminal sheriff of the parish of Orleans, prohibiting them from executing the sentence imposed. The application was granted and made returnable on March 10, 1922.

On that day, the judge of division O filed a motion to dismiss, based upon four grounds each of which will be stated, in determining the issues presented, as it is reached.

[1, 2] The first is that an applicant for writs of certiorari and prohibition must exhaust all recourse before making the application ; that the applicant, in this instance, has not done so, for the reason that under section 83 of article 7 of the Constitution of 1921 he had the right to appeal from the sentence imposed, to two or more judges of the criminal district court, and has failed to avail himself of that remedy.

This ground for dismissal cannot be maintained, for the reason that Ray had no such right of appeal, and, in fact, no right of appeal at all. In the absence of constitutional or statutory provision granting the right of review, a court of record is the exclusive judge of contempt committed against its authority and dignity. 13 O. J. p. 97, § 155. This court, by virtue of its general supervisory jurisdiction over all courts in the state, will review the validity of such proceedings, when sufficient ground exists therefor, and has repeatedly done so; but from the nature of the offense, which usually requires immediate punishment, in order to maintain the dignity and authority of the court, the right of appeal will not be held to exist, unless it be clearly granted. The respondent judge, however, points to the section of the Constitution mentioned above as granting that right. That section, in so far as it is necessary, to quote it at this time, reads:

“In all cases tried before the judges of the said criminal district court in which an appeal does not lie to the Supreme Court, and in cases tried before the juvenile court, an appeal shall lie on questions of law and fact to two or more of the judges of the said criminal district court, as may be prescribed by the said court; and the court shall adopt rules regulating the manner of taking and hearing and deciding said appeals.”

By the same section of the Constitution, the judges of the criminal district court are vested with criminal jurisdiction alone, and the contention is that such a contempt as the one for which Ray was found guilty is a criminal contempt, and the case in which he was prosecuted a criminal case, and that the expression “all cases,” used in the above-quoted constitutional provision, in granting the right of appeal, has reference to such a case, as well as to other criminal cases. This is plausible, but we do not think it so refers. While such a case is a criminal one, yet the expression, “all cases,” does not refer to contempt proceedings, which are institut&d under the inherent power of the criminal district court to protect itself and to accomplish the purposes for which it was created, but to those cases not appealable to this court, which the criminal district court was created to try, and in which each of the judges thereof is expressly vested with original jurisdiction, and which, at the time of the adoption of tire Constitution, were and are still tried on bills of indictment and information.

[3] As a further reason why this application should.be dismissed, it is urged that it should have been addressed to the court having appellate jurisdiction in cases appealed from the criminal district court. There are two such courts, the jurisdiction of each depending on the nature of the case or of the sentence imposed, one of which consists of [1035]*1035two or more judges of the criminal district court, and the other is this court, neither of which has appellate jurisdiction in such a case as the one here presented. The former has no supervisory jurisdiction over the criminal district court, whereas this court, by virtue of article 7, section 10, of the Constitution of 1921, has such jurisdiction. Hence the application was properly made to this court.

[4] The application is also excepted to on the ground that proof of notice of the intention to apply for the remedial writs herein was not made by affidavit of Ray, but by that of his attorney, which, it is averred, is not a compliance with rule 16 of this court. Rule 16 has reference to applications for writs of review or certiorari to the Courts of Appeal, and not district courts. Rule 15 applies to applications for remedial writs to be directed to district courts, and it is immaterial, under that rule, whether proof of such notice be made by affidavit of the applicant for the writs or by that of his counsel. 136 La. xii, 67 South. xi.

[5] The application is also excepted to on the ground that, prior to the granting of the rule nisi herein, Ray, at 3:15 p. m. on March 6, 1922, requested and received from the respondent judge a suspended sentence until 6 p. m. on that day, and thereby acquiesced in the judgment. It may be said that the application for the writs was made before the expiration of that time; and that the purpose, in requesting so short a suspension, was evidently to obtain time in which to make the application and procure the preliminary writs, so as to avoid incarceration, pending the preparation of the appplication, and its presentation to this court. The judge a quo evidently misinterpreted Ray’s request, for it did not amount to an acquiescence, but, to the contrary, showed the opposite.

[6] In the event of the overruling of his motion to dismiss, the respondent judge has requested that he be allowed 15 days additional within which to answer. This proceeding is summary. It should not be tried by piecemeal. When the proceeding is one of that nature, the motion to dismiss and the answer should be filed at the same time. Shaw v. Howell, 18 La. Ann. 195; Dugue v. Levy, 115 La. 83, 38 South. 902.

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Bluebook (online)
91 So. 443, 150 La. 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dowling-v-ray-la-1922.