State Ex Rel. Skinner v. Dostert

278 S.E.2d 624, 166 W. Va. 743, 1981 W. Va. LEXIS 599
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1981
Docket14911
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 278 S.E.2d 624 (State Ex Rel. Skinner v. Dostert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Skinner v. Dostert, 278 S.E.2d 624, 166 W. Va. 743, 1981 W. Va. LEXIS 599 (W. Va. 1981).

Opinion

McGraw, Justice:

The Prosecuting Attorney of Jefferson County here seeks a Writ of Prohibition to prevent enforcement of an “Administrative Order” ordered entered by the Circuit Judge of Jefferson County.

The Prosecuting Attorney complains that the “order” invades the jurisdiction of the Magistrate Court, that it invades the discretionary power of the Prosecuting *746 Attorney’s office and that the order is void because it was entered without “pleading, process, notice or hearing”.

We agree with the Prosecuting Attorney and award the writ.

The Circuit Judge of Jefferson County, upon his own motion, ordered the entry of an “administrative order” which specified a procedure for the dismissal of warrants by a Magistrate court.

In part the order provides:

“After a warrant is obtained, and the matter is referred to Circuit Court for the appointment of counsel, the Magistrate Court then has jurisdiction to perform only one function: to conduct a preliminary hearing. Discontinuance of the prosecution to the Grand Jury, or by nolle prosequi before this Court after an indictment is returned.
Nolle prosequi does lie in the case of a misdemeanor pending before the Magistrate Court. However, such should not be granted unless the complaining witness is aware of the dismissal by such a motion. A prosecution may also be discontinued at the request of the complaining witness in writing, withdrawing the complaint upon which the warrant is based. It is not within the power of the Prosecuting Attorney to dismiss a felony warrant after this Court has taken cognizance of the case, without an Order from this Court. Any questions pertaining to this may be presented to this Court.

The prosecutor contends that the order “usurped the power of’:

(1) the prosecuting attorney by purporting to authorize the magistrates to dismiss future criminal actions at the instance of the complainant without the consent of the prosecuting attorney[;]
(2) the prosecuting attorney by purporting to require the prosecuting attorney, in all future criminal actions, to obtain the approval of the circuit court before moving a magistrate to enter nolle pros in a criminal action pending in magistrate court[;]
*747 (3) the magistrates by purporting to prohibit them from dismissing future criminal actions in magistrate court without the approval of the circuit court[.]”

The prosecutor also argues that the order “attempts to affect all future criminal prosecutions in Magistrate Court ..that... it attempts, in all criminal cases, to limit the power of a Magistrate to enter a nolle prosequi ..., that it seeks to prevent the prosecuting attorney from entering [moving] a nolle pros, [or]... to dismiss a prosecution” and finally that the order is void because “it was entered without pleading, process, notice or hearing”. The judge answered our show cause order and in speaking to the issue raised in this case, said: “Nolle Prosequi is a plea that lies to a warrant for a misdemeanor or an indictment for a felony. It does not constitute a valid discontinuance of a warrant for a felony, since the warrant is not a statement charging the defendant. It is merely the means of apprehending a felon prior to indictment.”

The prosecutor, in speaking to the issue being considered here, stated, by brief, the “facts of the case”.

Respondent Pierre Dostert, Judge of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, on June 17, 1980, entered an “Administrative Order” No. 80-A-1, Relator’s Exhibit A, and thereafter caused attested copies to be mailed to the Relator and the Magistrate court clerk. The order was entered without pleading, process, notice or hearing of any kind. The order although somewhat ambiguous, purported to command the following: (1) It prohibited magistrates in Jefferson County, in all future felony actions, from entering nolle pros at the instances of the state between the time of warrant issuance and the time of a finding of probable cause. (2) It purported to require the magistrate or the State, in all future misdemeanor prosecutions, to notify the complainant before entering nolle pros. (3) It purported to give a complainant the power to discontinue a misdemeanor prosecution without the state’s acquiescence. (4) It purported to require the State to petition and obtain the approval of the circuit court *748 before entering nolle pros of a felony in magistrate court. The order did not purport to control disposition of the Jack Lee Rose warrants, which had been dismissed on a nolle motion of the State prior to the entry of the June 17 order.

The judge does not dispute the prosecutor’s characterization of the facts.

From our review of the order and the pleadings filed in this case, we think the major issue fairly presented by the record is: under what circumstances and by what means can a superior court control the disposition of proceedings in an inferior court? The order of record also raises the question of the extent to which a circuit court may control the prosecuting attorney’s actions in magistrate court. This case presents an excellent factual situation for discussing the duties and prerogatives of these judicial and executive officers for it arises out of a dispute concerning nolle prosequi, a concept in the law which is recited throughout the judge’s order.

I

We think that a proper resolution of the issues presented by this case calls first for a review of the origin and nature of nolle prosequi. At common law, nolle prosequi was nothing more than a statement by the prosecutor that he would proceed no further in a criminal case which, in and of itself, terminated the prosecution. The discretion to discontinue prosecution rested solely with the prosecutor and it was unnecessary to obtain the permission of the court to give legal effect to this decision. 6A M.J. Dismissal § 88; 22A C.J.S. Criminal Law § 457. The duty of the court to direct the entry of the nolle prosequi on the rolls was purely ministerial. This was so because the sovereign, personified in the King, was theoretically the only party interested in the prosecution. The prosecutor and his supervisor, the Attorney General, were agents of the King, answerable only to him. If the agent of the sovereign desired that a prosecution should cease, that was the end of the matter. The public subjects had no interest and could not be heard to complain.

*749 Except for historical interest, the prerogatives of the King of England are not germane to West Virginia public law. The American constitutional system, under which West Virginia’s government is organized, W.Va. Const, art. 1, § 1, changed substantially the operative theory of sovereignty and identified the sovereign, whose will legitimizes authority, as the people. Virginia Declaration of Rights, c.

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.E.2d 624, 166 W. Va. 743, 1981 W. Va. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-skinner-v-dostert-wva-1981.