State v. Briwa

5 So. 2d 304, 198 La. 970, 1941 La. LEXIS 1182
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 3, 1941
DocketNo. 36241.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 5 So. 2d 304 (State v. Briwa) 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 v. Briwa, 5 So. 2d 304, 198 La. 970, 1941 La. LEXIS 1182 (La. 1941).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

George Briwa, James H. Morrison, Allen Dunnington and R. M. Singletary were charged in an indictment filed on March 14, 1941, with criminal libel of W. Prescott Foster on March 8, 1941, “by making, writing, publishing and causing to be published, a certain false, scandalous and malicious libel of and concerning the said W. Prescott Foster,” which libel was alleged to have appeared in a newspaper publication designated as “The Farmers’ Friend,” the “official organ of the Louisiana Farmers’ Protective Union, Incorporated.”

The defendants filed a plea to the territorial jurisdiction of the Criminal District Court for the Parish of Orleans on the ground that “The Farmers’ Friend” was published in the City of Hammond, Parish of Tangipahoa, Louisiana, and, therefore, if any offense had been committed, it took place in Tangipahoa Parish and not in the City of New Orleans.

After a hearing, in open court, on the plea to the jurisdiction, the district judge overruled it, and the defendants, as relators, then applied to this Court for writs of certiorari and prohibition.

We issued a writ of certiorari, returnable on October 10, 1941, and the case is now before us for review.

The question of jurisdiction involved here has no bearing whatever on the guilt or innocence of the accused.

The relevant part of Section IX, Article I of the Constitution of the State of Louisiana of 1921, reads:

“* * * provided further, that all trials shall take place in the parish in which the offense was committed, unless the venue be changed; provided further, that the Legislature may provide for the venue and prosecution of offenses committed within one hundred feet of the boundary line of a parish. * * * ”

In the case of State v. Nugent, 191 La. 198, at page 200, 184 So. 746, at page 747, this Court said:

“Under the provisions of Section 9 of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution of 1921 a person accused of a crime has the right to have a plea to the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court passed on by the trial judge before being put on trial for the alleged offense. This provision of the Constitution not only guarantees the defendant that he shall not be convicted in any other parish than that in which the offense was committed but guarantees that he shall not be tried in any- other parish. This identical question was decided in the case of State v. Hogan, 157 La. 287, 102 So. 403, wherein this Court, after reviewing all the prior decisions on this subject matter, concluded that the defendant is as a matter of right entitled to have his plea to the territorial jurisdiction of the court decided before being placed on trial for the offense.'’ (Italics ours.)

*976 In the case of State v. Moore et al., 140 La. 281, 72 So. 965, 971, the editor of the Times-Picayune and one of its reporters were indicted for libelling Clarence Pierson, in East Feliciana Parish, because of publications appearing in that newspaper’s issues of February 13th, 14th, 15th and 16th (1916). Pleas to the territorial jurisdiction of the court were filed on the ground that the Times-Picayune Publishing Company, the corporation owning the newspaper, had its domicile in the City of New Orleans and that its editor and manager and its reporter also resided there;1 that the paper was printed and published or issued in the City of New Orleans and that if a libel had been committed, the offense took place only in the City of New Orleans; that under the law there could be only one offense and that the accused, under the Constitution, was entitled to be tried only in the parish where the alleged ■ libel was committed. The trial court overruled the plea to the jurisdiction and the accused applied to this Court for writs. In sustaining the jurisdictional plea and annulling the judgment of the lower court overruling it, this' Court stated:

“* * * The language of article 9 of the Constitution leaves no doubt that the allegation in an indictment that the alleged offense was committed in the parish in which the indictment is presented is not to be presumed to be true, for the purposes of the trial of a plea to the jurisdiction, or until the jury or judge decides otherwise on the trial of the person accused. The constitutional requirement is not that all trials shall take place in the parish in which the offense is alleged to have been committed. If that were the constitutional requirement, the allegation in the indictment that the alleged offense was committed in a certain parish would be sufficient to vest the court having criminal jurisdiction in that parish with jurisdiction of the offense charged, and a plea to the jurisdiction would be treated as an exception of no cause of action is in a civil case. But the constitutional guaranty is ‘that all trials shall take place in the parish in which the offense was committed.’ In the case last cited (State v. Montgomery [115 La. 155, 38 So. 949]), it was alleged in the indictment that the offense was committed within the parish of Franklin, within 100 yards of the boundary line of that parish. The right of the defendants to require that allegation to be proven before they were put on trial, in order to preserve their constitutional right not to be tried in any other parish than that in which the offense was committed, was not doubted by this court.

* =1=

“The ‘publication,’ in the case cited, was the selling of the newspaper by Staub, the plaintiff in the main suit and defendant in reconvention; and it was properly held that each sale or delivery of the newspaper, containing the libelous article was a distinct offense. It is not contended in the case before us that the defendant Daniel D. Moore published the alleged libelous article in the sense in which the word is used- in the case cited; i. e., by delivering, exhibiting, or exposing a copy of the paper in the parish of East Feliciana. On the contrary, it is admitted that the only publishing done by the *978 defendant Moore was the publishing of the Times-Picayune containing the alleged libelous articles, in the sense in which the word ‘publish’ is used in newspaper parlance. The case cited, therefore, has little or no application to the facts of the case before us.

“The defendants also quote from page 5844, vol. 6, of Words and Phrases [First Series], citing Giles v. State, 6 Ga. 276, viz.:

“ ‘ “Publication,” as the word is used in reference to the publication of a libel,, is nothing more than doing the last act of the accomplishment intended by it. The moment a man delivers a libel from his hands, his control over it is gone. He has shot his arrow, and it does not depend upon him whether it hits the mark or not. There is an end of the locus pcenitentise; -his offense is complete; all that depends up'on him is consummated; and, from that moment, upon every principle of common sense, he is liable to be called upon to answer for his act.’

“The quotation is appropriate only to the question whether the defendant in this case was guilty of the crime of libel by publishing the newspaper containing the article supposed to be libelous, in the city of New Orleans.

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5 So. 2d 304, 198 La. 970, 1941 La. LEXIS 1182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-briwa-la-1941.