State v. Smith

3 Balt. C. Rep. 188
CourtBaltimore City Court
DecidedJune 5, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 188 (State v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Smith, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 188 (Md. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.—

The Court: Now, gentlemen, the court is ready to decide the case that was argued before it on Monday, being the demurrer in the election eases, that demurrer involving Messrs. Schuman and Smith, the judges appointed to represent the Republican party in the late primary election.

The question submitted to this court for decision in the present case, while that decision may be highly important to the State and to the traversers, and far reaching in its consequences to the public, is, after all, a very narrow one.

The demurrer interposed by the traversers to the indictment found against them admits in law the commission of certain acts under which the election law as it existed at the time of such commission, amounted to offenses subjecting them to punishment, but they say, the law which made these acts violations of law and subjected us to punishment has been repealed, and repealed without any saving clause, and the courts have no right or power to try us, and there is no law under which we can be punished.

It is important that we should appreciate and state at the .outstart the position assumed by the traversers in filing this demurrer, and the court is of the opinion that it could not be better stated than it has been by our Court of Appeals in the case of State against the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, 12 Gill & Johnson, page 437.

The Court of Appeals, speaking through Judge Stephen, quotes with approval Chancellor Kent, where he says, “If an act be penal and temporary by the terms or nature of it, the party offending must be prosecuted and punished before the act expires or be repealed.” And the court also quotes from Chief Justice Marshall where, in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court in the case of Yeaton and others, claimants, against the United States, in 5 Cranch, at page 283, he says, “It has been long settled on general principles that after the expiration or repeal of a law, no penalty can be enforced nor punishment inflicted for violation of the law while it was in force, unless some special provision be made for that purpose by the statute.”

The law as announced by our Court of Appeals in 12 Gill & Johnson, in 1842, following the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, made in 1812, has been exemplified in a number of cases since, all of which, while necessarily differing in the facts involved, have agreed in the one particular, that after the repeal or expiration of the law without some saving clause, the courts are without jurisdiction to punish for the violation of the law committed while it was in force.

Those cases have been decided at intervals from 1842 down to and inclusive of the case of State against Gambrill, reported in 115 Md., page 506, and it would answer no useful purpose to set them out in this opinion.

Applying the principle of those decisions to the present case, the traversers say that the law, which made the acts recited in the indictment, demurred to offenses against the law and punishable under the law, has been repealed, and that without any saving clause.

Therefore, they say, admitting the commission of the offenses, the courts are powerless to try and punish those offenses.

Speaking particularly and specifically, the traversers say the several [189]*189tilings complained of were offenses under Section 160-L of 1lie Acts of 1910, which section was repealed by Chapter 2 of the Acts of 1912, which latter act contained no saving clause, and those offenses could only have been prosecuted and punished while the act was in force and before it had expired or been repealed.

It is evident, therefore, that the decision of this demurrer depends upon the answer to the question as to the effect of the Acts of 1910 and 1912 upon the existing law, and primarily upon the question as to whether or not the Act of 1910 made criminal acts which, before that act went into effect, would not have been criminal if committed at that time, and whether or not those provisions of the Act of 1910 have been repealed by the Act of 1912.

It has been announced by the courts too often for successful controversy that in construing the provisions and effect of legislative enactments, due weight must be at all times given to the legislative intent, and it would not be treating the legislature of a State with the respect to which it is entitled to conclude that intending one thing it had really and actually done something which defeated that intent.

To conclude, therefore, that when they passed the Act of 1912 they thereby repealed the Act of 1910 is to say that the legislature of Maryland, after the existing law had been violated, and while the alleged violators were in course of punishment in the courts, it deliberately repealed the law under which the prose,cutions were had, for the purpose and with the intent that the violators should escape punishment, because, as I said before, it can not be for a moment conceded that the legislature did not know what it was doing when it passed the Act of 1912; and if the Act of 1912 has had the effect which is claimed for it by the traversers, then we must conclude that the legislature intended to do what it is claimed they have done.

Representing one of the co-ordinate branches of the government, I should hate very much, even in my own mind, to come to a conclusion of that kind, and I am quite sure that no court would promulgate a decision which necessarily concluded that fact.

Now let us, if you please, examine the law of 1910, and confining ourselves entirely to the particular section which has been referred to by the counsel for the traversers, quoting from the codification of the Election Laws, published by authority of the Secretary of State, which codification includes the Act of 1910, we find that the provision of Section 160-L is in these words:

“'The provisions, all and singular, from sections 87 to 115 of this article, both inclusive, and the offenses defined and the penalties and punishments prescribed therefor in said sections, respectively, shall be fully applicable in all respects to the same persons, matters and omissions in connection with or pertaining to the primary elections of any primary election held under this article, sub-title ‘Primary Elections,’ and said sections are hereby made applicable to all primary elections provided for and held hereunder.”

Then it goes on to specifically provide that any judge, clerk or other officer of any primary election, or any voter or other person who would be deemed guilty of any offense against the General Election Law, or under provision or provisions thereof, in a general election, who is found guilty of the same offense in any primary election, as herein provided for, shall be deemed guilty of the same crime of which his offense is made to consist by and under the General Election Law, and particularly under any of the above mentioned sections, respectively, thereof, and shall be liable to the same punishment or penalty as is prescribed for such sections thereof.

Then comes a proviso that Sections 160-M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U and V thereof with respect to the offenses, penalties and punishments under the primary election law, shall have full force and effect in all cases to which the same are applicable.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-mdcityctbalt-1912.