State v. . Wynne

21 S.E. 35, 116 N.C. 981
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 21 S.E. 35 (State v. . Wynne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Wynne, 21 S.E. 35, 116 N.C. 981 (N.C. 1895).

Opinion

Aveby, J.:

The statute {Code, Sec. 35) by imposing a fine for begetting a bastard child, makes the act a criminal offence. State v. Parsons, 115 N. C., 730; State v. Burton, 113 N. C., at page 655; Myers v. Stafford, 114 N. C., at page 240. The limiting of the punishment to a fine of ten dollars ipsa facto confers exclusive original jurisdiction of the criminal offence upon the courts of justices of the peace for twelve months from the time when the offence is committed (Laws 1889, Ch. 504); but after the lapse of a year, the concurrent jurisdiction of Superior and Criminal Courts attaches under the provisions of TheCode, Sec. 892.

When is the criminal offence complete? -It is clearly when the child is begotten, because the mother as soon as she becomes conscious of her pregnancy is allowed to complain {Code, Sec. 32) and procure the issuing of a warrant, upon which the accused may be arraigned and tried immediately on being brought before a justice of the peace, unless the justice shall deem it proper to grant him a continuance. Code, Sec. 34. Following the principle announced in State v. Burton, supra, the Court said in Myers v. Stafford, supra, that “ the question being now presented in such shape that it is necessary to be decided, we are of the opinion that the iegetting of a bastard child has become a petty misdemeanor.’’'1 It was demonstrated in State v. Burton, supra, “that a fine can only be imposed for a crime or misdemeanor or a contempt.”

The charge embodied in the indictment and sustained by the proof upon which the defendant was found guilty was that he “on the fourth day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-three, in and upon the body of one Mary Neal did wilfully and unlawfully *983 beget a bastard child, &c.” The indictment was sent and returned a true bill at January Term, 1895, of the Court, more than twelve months after the child had been begotten and the offence had become complete. Construing The Gode, Sec. 892, with the amendatory act of 1889, prolonging the period for the exercise of exclusive original jurisdiction by the justice from six to twelve months, we can not escape the conclusion that after one year from the perpetration of the petty misdemeanor of begetting a bastard child, that, like all other offences, for which ho .greater punishment can be imposed than a fine of fifty dollars or imprisonment for one month, becomes cognizable in the Superior Court as well as beforé a justice of the peáce, until the prosecution is barred by the lapse of time.

The plea of not guilty necessarily in volves the question of paternity, upon which the finding, on the issue raised by it, depends. When, therefore, the defendant is convicted of the criminal offence, the incidental authority to enforce the police regulation as pointed out in Parson’s and Burton’s cases, supra, is immediately vested in the Court that takes cognizance of the misdemeanor. The power of the Court to imprison for fine and costs as well as for non-payment of the allowance, and the relation sustained by the mother of the bastard and of the County Commissioners to the judgment were fully discussed in State v. Parsons, supra. The incidental authority to enforce the police regulation is expressly Conferred by statute, and there can be no reasonable doubt about the power of the Legislature in the premises. At common law, in addition to the infliction of punishment of fine and imprisonment for a public nuisance, the Court might order that the nuisance be abated. 2 Wharton Or. Law (7th Ed.) Sec. 2377. So that, to clothe the Court with some incidental power to further provide for the public protection, after making an example of the offender, is to *984 neither transcend the limit of legislative authority nor to depart from the practice prescribed in other cases.

The learned counsel for the defendant referred on the argument to a warrant, but the record sent up is entirely consistent with the idea that the prosecution .had originated in the Superior Court by the sending of the indictment after that Court had' concurrent jurisdiction. If we could conceive, therefore, of any principle upon which the fact of the assumption of jurisdiction by a justice, where neither the pendency of a prosecution nor the judgment of that court. had been pleaded or set up in bar, would defeat the jurisdiction of the Superior Court to try after the lapse of twelve months from the commission of the offence (State v. Drake, 64 N. C., 589) we can take no judicial knowledge of matters outside of the record.

By permission of the Court the defendant’s counsel has been allowed, since the foregoing was written, to present to the Court some additional reasons for maintaining that there was error below. The statute (Gode, Sec. 31) restricts the right of justices of the peace to issue warrants for bastardy, to cases where the affidavit is made voluntarily by the mother, or upon certain grounds set forth by a County Commissioner, just as the Act of 1868 made it a condition precedent to the exercise of jurisdiction in case of assault and battery that it should appear by affidavit that there was no collusion between the complainant and defendant. But the Superior Court is a Court of general jurisdiction, and there being nothing upon the face of the^record to oust its authority, it must ¡rroceed to try, when a defendant is arraigned for an offence and it appears from the indictment itself that a justice’s court no longer has the exclusive right to take cognizance. The rule finds illustrations in those cases where a more serious assault is charged and the proof sustains only a conviction for such an assault, as *985 is, at the time, within the exclusive jurisdiction of a justice. State v. Cunningham, 94 N. C., 824; State v. Fesperman, 108 N. C., 770; State v. Speller, 91 N. C., 526; State v. Ray, 89 N. C., 587; State v. Russell, 91 N. C., 624: The authority of a justice of the peace to take cognizance of criminal actions is special, conferred at the discretion of the legislature under a well-defined power given in the Constitution, Article 4, Section 27. State v. Jones, 100 N. C., 438. There is a presumption in favor of the rightful authority of a court of general jurisdiction, when upon the face of the record it appears to have cognizance. The authority of a justice of the peace, on the other hand, is not based upon any principle of the common or organic law delegating and fully defining it, but upon the discretionary exercise of a restricted power by the legislature.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Flores v. State
72 Fla. 302 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1916)
State v. . Addington
57 S.E. 398 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1907)
State v. White
125 N.C. 674 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1899)
McDonald v. . Morrow
26 S.E. 132 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1896)
State v. . Nelson
25 S.E. 863 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1896)
State v. . Ostwalt
24 S.E. 660 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1896)
State v. . Ivie
24 S.E. 539 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1896)
State v. . Mize
23 S.E. 330 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 S.E. 35, 116 N.C. 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wynne-nc-1895.