State v. Graham

1 Ark. 428
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 Ark. 428 (State v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Graham, 1 Ark. 428 (Ark. 1839).

Opinion

Rincso, Chief Justice,

delivered the following opinion in two cases, the two being precisely alike in every respect:

This is an indictment originally prosecuted in the City Court of Little Rock, against the defendant,for betting at a prohibited game commonly called faro; upon which the defendant was convicted on his own .confession of guilt, and a lino imposed upon him, and judgment therefor given in the City Court. To reverse which the defendant prosecuted a writ of error out of this court, whereby a transcript of the record, proceedings and judgment against him in the City Court, was brought before this court, and the judgment reversed, and the case remanded to the Circuit Court of Palaski county, to be there proceeded in according to law, and the opinion of this court delivered therein. The Circuit Court on the appearance of the case therein, ordered and permitted the mandate of this court to be filed and entered on the. record; and afterwards permitted the defendant to plead to the jurisdiction of the court, and upon the issue formed thereupon, decided that the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction of the case, and gave a final judgment, “ that the' defendant be discharged, and go hence without

To this opinion and judgment the attorney proseculingjfor the Slate excepted and filed his bill of exceptions, which was made a part of the record; and thereupon prosecutes this writ of error, in the name of the State, to reverse said judgment.

The first question presented is this: Is the State entitled by law to the writ of error. This right is denied by the defendant, and willbe examined by the court. The case originated in the city court, but as to the present question, it must be governed by the same principles and laws as if it had been originally prosecuted in the Circuit Court; the question therefore, from the extent of its appreciation, is one of interest and importance, and is not free from difficulty."

Prior to the adoption of the constitution, the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court in all criminal cases of which they had cognizance, was “ exclusive.”

The 5th section of the act of Congress approved April 17, 1828, Ark. Dig. jo. 42, expressly prohibited the right of appeal in criminal cases, from the Circuit Court to the Superior Court; and the Legislature by an act approved October 22, 1828, Ark. Dig. p. 122, S. 2, provided that the Circuit Courts should have “ the exclusive cognizance of all criminal cases within their respective circuits,” whereby the whole jurisdiction of criminal cases became vested in the Circuit Court.

These Statutory provisions were in force when the constitution was adopted, and the change from a Territorial to a State form of Government, took place, except so far as the latter act, was modified by the act of 1835, in conferring upon the City Court of Little Rock, the exclusive original of all criminal cases, less than felony at common law, arising within the incorporated limits of said city; a modification which has no influence on the question now under consideration.

The constitution in section 3rd of artille YI, provides that “ the Circuit Court shall have original jurisdiction over all criminal cases which shall not be otherwise provided for bylaw; and exclusive original jurisdiction of all crimes amounting to felony at the common law.”

And in section 2, of the same article, it is provided that “the Supreme Court, except in cases otherwise directed by this constitution, shall have appellate jurisdiction only, which shall be co-extensive with the State, under such restrictions and regulations as may from time to time be presented by law.”

These are believed to be the only provisions in the constitution which-have any relation to-the subject; and they do not direct the Circuit Courts of their “ exclusive” jurisdiction in criminal matters; for between the grant of original jurisdiction conferred by the constitution, and the grant of “ exclusive ” jurisdiction given by the Statute, there is no conflict: because it is obviously true, that the same tribunal may have the original, sole, and final adjudication of any given case or class of cases, and whenever this is the case, the jurisdiction of such-tribunal over such case or class of,cases, is exclusive; but whenever the jurisdiction of any case or class of cases, is distributed between different tribunals, as where one has original, and another appellate-jurisdiction over the same case, neither tribunal has the exclusive jurisdiction thereof. The grant in the constitution confirms in the Circuit Courts, a part of the powers with which they were then invested by the Statute, without divesting them of any other power, conferred upon them by law.

Nor is there any conflict between the provisions of the Statute conferring on the Circuit Courts exclusive jurisdiction in criminal cases, and the appellate jurisdiction conferred by the constitution on the Supreme Court. The latter, although it is declared to be co-extensive with the-State, is no where defined in the constitution, that is, the constitution wholly omits to point out the subjects to which the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court shall extend, or to indicate in any manner whether it shall be exercised over the decisions of the Circuit Courts, the county courts, the probate courts, corporation courts, or justices of the peace, or all, any or either of them-: therefore the’whole appellate power and jurisdiction of the Supreme Court is made by the constitution itself to depend upon the law as it stood when the constitution was adopted; subject,however, to such alterations as the legislature should from time to time prescribe by law — thereby confiding to the law and the legislature without any restraint whatever, the whole right and the exclusive privilege of specifying the particular subject to which the appellate power of the Supreme Court shall extend, and regulating and prescribing the manner in which they shall be brought before the court, whether by appeal, writ of error, or otherwise; also at what ' time, by whom, and from the decision of what court they shall or may be so brought up; consequently the legislature may bylaw at any time, change or modify the different subject matters to which the appellate power of this courtshall extend, making it cover more or less space, asthey •shall think proper. If this view of the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court be correct, as from a careful examination of the whole judiciary system and every branch thereof, and of the powers of each, as conferred or limited by the Constitution, we are induced to believe it is, it follows as a necéssary consequence, that the exclusive jurisdiction of the Circuit Courts over criminal matters is not affected or impaired by any thing contained m the constitution. The schedule 'in the constitution, section 2, declares, “ that all lays now in force in the Territory of Arkansas, which are not repugnant to the constitu-lion, shall remain in full force until they expire by their own limitations, orbe altered or repealed by .the General Assembly.”

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ark. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-graham-ark-1839.