State v. Ferguson

23 S.C.L. 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 15, 1838
StatusPublished

This text of 23 S.C.L. 152 (State v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ferguson, 23 S.C.L. 152 (S.C. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Earle, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question concerning the territorial extent of the juris-, diction of Justices of the Peace seems to be presented here for the first time; as there has been some diversity of opinion, and some also of practice, it is well enough to have it adjudicated, so as to produce uniformity and prevent conflict. It is a question of authority, to be decided by research, rather than of principle, to be illustrated by argument. Justices of the peace are frequently mentioned in the earlier colonial acts, and seem to be recognised as public officers of acknowledged authority and jurisdiction. By the Act of 1712, P. L. 99, 4th sec., it is enacted that the justices of the peace in this Province shall have the power of justices of the peace in the kingdom of England.” The institution was derived from the mother country, and we must look there for information concerning the nature and mode of their appointment, and the extent of their jurisdiction. Burns, in his Justice, says, “justices of the peace at this day are of three sorts. 1st. By Act of Parliament, as the Bishop of Ely and his successors, [154]*154the Archbishop of York, &c., 27 H. 8, c. 24. 2d. By charter or grant of the king under the great seal — as mayors and the chief officers in divers corporate towns. 3d. By commission.” It is of this last sort only that we need to inquire; and although conservators of the peace were known and recognised by the laws of England in sundry superior and inferior public officers of the kingdom, designated by other appropriate titles, as early as the conquest, yet justices of the peace as such, are said to have their origin in the statute of 1 Ed. 3, c. 16, by which it was ordained that “in every shire of the realm, good men and lawful, (which were no maintainers of evil, nor barretors in the country,) should be assigned to keep the peace.” By 4 Ed. 3, c. 2, it is likewise ordained, “ there shall be assigned good and lawful men in every county to keep the peace.” By 18 Ed. 3, s. 2, it is enacted, “that two or three, of the best reputation in the counties, shall be assigned keepers of the peace by the king’s commission.” Viner’s Abridgement, 4, 5. But the stat. of 36 Ed. 3, c. 12, is said by Dalton to be the first statute that nameth them justices of the peace. The mode of appointment, therefore, in England, is by commission from the king, as such it has always been from their first institution. To ascertain the nature and extent of the appointment, it is necessary that we should look into the commission. The form of this instrument, as adopted under the statute of 1 Ed. 3, was altered and enlarged, in pursuance of' the several statutes passed in the reign of the same sovereign, and continued to be still further enlarged from time to time, under succeeding princes, until the 30th year of Elizabeth, when it was become so cumbersome it was necessary to reform it. This was done by a general conference of the judges, at the suggestion of the Chief Justice of the King’s Bench, and a form of commission framed, which being approved by the Chancellor, was adopted, and with little alteration, continued to be used. It may be found in Dalton’s J. 16, in Latin — and in Burns’s J. 7, in English. I quote from the latter, which is a literal translation of the former — “George III., &c.; to A, B, C, D, &c., Know ye, that we have assigned you, jointly and severally, and every one of you, our justices to keep our peace in our county of "W. — and keep and cause to be kept, all ordinances and statutes for the good of the peace, for the preservation of [155]*155the same, and for the quiet rule and government of our people, made in all and singular their articles in our said county —as well within liberties, and without, according to the form, force, and effect of the same.” Considering together the statutes providing for the appointment of justices to keep the peace, or of the peace, and looking at the phraseology of the statutes, “ in every shire good men and lawful,”- — “ good men and lawful in every county,” — “two or three of the best reputation in the counties,” shall be designated to keep the peace therein, and comparing these with the commission itself, which is the evidence of their authority, as also of its extent, the conclusion is unavoidable, that the justices should reside in the county, and that their power and. jurisdiction do not extend beyond it. The being good and lawful men in the county, and of the best reputation, they are assigned to keep the peace in the said county, and to keep, or cause to be kept, all ordinances and statutes for the good of the peace, and for the preservation of the same, &c., in the said county. Such is the obvious interpretation of the statutes and commission, without regard to precedent. If we look into authorities, we shall be confirmed in this construction. On this head I will first quote Dalton, whose “County Justice,” published in 1705, is the ground work of all subsequent treatises; and here, says he, p.' 24, “ I must further put justices of the peace in mind that their authority and power is limited, to be by them exercised only within the county ór counties where they be in commission, and yet in such county or counties the justices of the peace of the county must not intermeddle in any city there, or corporate town, (háving their own proper justices of peace by king’s charter or commission,) except such county justice shall also be in commission in such city or town corporate: but in other corporate towns which have not their proper justices of peace, as also in all liberties and franchises (within the county) which have the return of writs but have not their proper justices — there the justices of the peace of the county ought to execute their authority, and that by the words of their commission.” Again, says he, “ if a parish shall extend into two or more counties, or if part thereof shall lie within the liberties of any city or town corporate, (which have their proper justices,) and part without, then as well the justices of the county as the justices of such city or town cor[156]*156porate, shall intermeddle with their own proper and distinct limits and bounds, &c., within so much of the said parish, &c., as lieth within their several liberties and limits, and not invade or deal in other jurisdictions; for it shall be against law and reason, where officers and jurisdictions are several, that the one should intermeddle with the jurisdiction of the other.” And so also says Burná, (in his commentary on the commission already quoted from his book,) “here are two considerations: one is that the justice cannot act when he is out of the county: and the other is, that when he is in the county, he can act for that county only, and his power ex-tendeth to no other.” And in order to remedy an evil that necessarily grew out of this last restriction, where one against whom a warrant had issued in a particular county for an offence there, escaped and fled into another, where the warrant did not extend, the stat. 24, G 2, c. 55, was passed, providing a mode by which the warrant could be made effectual in the county to which the accused had fled, by a justice there indorsing his name thereon, proof on oath of the handwriting of the issuing justice being furnished. Such a statute could not have been deemed necessary if a warrant could be executed out of the county by virtue of its original authority. In Vin. Abr.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.C.L. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ferguson-scctapp-1838.