State v. Letellier

90 So. 218, 149 La. 847, 1921 La. LEXIS 1511
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 4, 1921
DocketNo. 24438
StatusPublished

This text of 90 So. 218 (State v. Letellier) 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. Letellier, 90 So. 218, 149 La. 847, 1921 La. LEXIS 1511 (La. 1921).

Opinions

PROVOSTY, J.

The relators are the Business Men’s Racing Association and its officers. They obtained an injunction in the civil district court against the district attorney and the superintendent of police to prevent them' from attempting to charge them with a violation of Act 57 of 1908, prohibiting gambling on horse races by the operation of betting books, French mutual pooling devices, auction pools, or any other device, and providing penalties for violation of the act. Disregarding this injunction, the district attorney filed information against the said officers in the criminal district court, division B, presided over by the respondent judge, and the criminal prosecutions were being proceeded with when the said relators filed in this court the present application for a writ of prohibition to be addressed to tbe respondent judge prohibiting him from proceeding further with said prosecutions.

The ground of the injunction was that such criminal imosccutions would injure the property rights of the petitioners, and would be unreasonable and arbitrary, as the question of whether the mode of betting on tbe race track of the relators was a violation of said statute had already been considered by tbe Supreme Court and decided in the negative.

The ground of the present application to this court is that the continuation of said criminal prosecution will be ruinous to tbe said Business Men’s Racing Association, and that mere proceedings for contempt against the district attorney for violation of the said injunction would not afford adequate remedy, as in the meantime the irreparable injury to the relators would be done.

From tbe return of tbe learned respondent judge we transcribe as follows:

“Article 845 of tbe Code of Practice provides that a writ of prohibition ‘only issues to courts of inferior judges which exceed the bounds of their jurisdiction.’
“Article 139 of the Constitution provides that: ‘The criminal district court shall have exclusive original jurisdiction for the trial and punishment of all offenses when the penalty of death, imprisonment at hard labor or imprisonment without hard labor for any time exceeding six months, or a fine exceeding $300--00 may be imposed.’
“Relators stand charged in respondent's court with an offense of which the criminal district court has exclusive trial jurisdiction. It is therefore plain that, so 'far as the trial of [849]*849relators is concerned, your respondent had jurisdiction.
“Therefore, if your respondent has exceeded the bounds of his jurisdiction, it must arise from some other cause than the nature of the~ offense charged, or, in other words, that though under the Constitution respondent had jurisdiction of the case, something has happened which has removed the case from your respondent’s jurisdiction. The question then for you; '>onors to decide is in what way has your respondent exceeded the bounds of a jurisdiction which confessedly is lodged in him? What has happened to take away from your respondent the trial of the case, the right to try which is vested in him by the Constitution?
“Nothing is better settled than that the civil district court and the criminal district court is each a separate and independent tribunal, and each utterly without power to control in any way the action of the other; that when, therefore, one of these tribunals exceeds the bounds of its jurisdiction, the remedy lies only in the Supreme Court. It is respectfully submitted that relators have by their own allegations put themselves out of court. They confess that the civil district court is without authority to issue an injunction against your respondent, but they say that an issuance of an injunction by the civil district court against the district attorney is, in effect, an injunction against your respondent;' in other words, they seek to make your honors believe that they believe that what cannot be directly accomplished can be accomplished by indirection. What relators seek to do is really to contrive a device for obtaining that which the law says they shall not, under any circumstances, obtain.
“Nothing is better settled than that no man is bound by proceedings to which ho is a stranger. Tour respondent was not made a party to the injunction sued out against the district attorney and the chief of police; hence he could under no circumstances be bound by the proceedings in that case.
“When it was moved before respondent that relators’ trial should be continued until such time as the injunctions issued by the civil district court against the district attorney and the chief of police should have been disposed of, it was not urged that the jurisdiction of the criminal district court had been ousted by the issuance of an injunction; but, had such proposition been urged, respondent would have forthwith overruled it as being absolutely contrary to the Constitution of this state and to the settled jurisprudence of Louisiana.
“Tour respondent is in no wise interested in any controversy that may be pending between relators and the district attorney, nor is it any concern of your respondent whether the district attorney has or has not been guilty of contempt of the injunction issued against him by the civil district court, but your respondent is vitally interested in preserving the dignity and usefulness of the court over which he presides, and he feels that to hold that an injunction against the district attorney ties up prosecutions in the criminal district court makes his court sink into not only an inferior tribunal, but into a tribunal in which the exercise of a jurisdiction conferred by the Constitution is taken away- from him and lodged in a court having no jurisdiction in criminal matters.
“There are other rights to be protected than merely the alleged rights of property. The granting of the relief prayed for by relators would completely paralyze the administration of criminal justice, and could prevent the trial of the murderer, the forger, the embezzler, or the ravisher. If, upon the bare allegation that his property rights are involved in a prosecution which the district attorney contemplates bringing against him, such person has the right by means of an injunction issued by a civil court to prevent the judge of a criminal court from taking cognizance of any prosecution that might be instituted against this accused, then the administration of criminal justice becomes a lamentable farce. Such things cannot be. This matter was decided adversely to relators’ pretensions in the matter of State ex rel. Walker v. Judge, 39 La. Ann. 132, 1 South. 437.
“Relators invoke the exercise of our supervisory jurisdiction through the writs of prohibition and certiorari, for the purpose of restraining the respondent judge and the district attorney of the parish of Orleans from proceeding further in certain criminal prosecutions instituted and pending in the criminal district court of said parish, for alleged violations of Act No. 18 of 1S86, commonly known as the ‘Sunday Law,’ and of annulling the proceedings already had in said causes.
“The grounds assigned for the relief sought are twofold, viz.:

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Bluebook (online)
90 So. 218, 149 La. 847, 1921 La. LEXIS 1511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-letellier-la-1921.