Steele v. Karb

78 Ohio St. (N.S.) 376
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1908
DocketNo. 10381
StatusPublished

This text of 78 Ohio St. (N.S.) 376 (Steele v. Karb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steele v. Karb, 78 Ohio St. (N.S.) 376 (Ohio 1908).

Opinion

Price, C. J.

On or about' the 15th day of November, 1905, the plaintiff in error under the name of Fred Francis was arrested on a warrant issued by Charles G. Lakin, a justice of the peace, for unlawfully hunting", upon the premises — the farm land of Mary E. Pless — without the written permission of the owner-, or her authorized agent, to enter upon said lands and hunt game thereon. The affidavit on which the warrant issued charged Steele, alias Francis, with unlawfully going upon the lands with a shotgun for the purpose of hunting without the written permission of the owner or her agent, and that this was done in Franklin county, Ohio. The affidavit on which the warrant was issued was made by Bert Schoene, a game warden, and it was he who executed the writ and took the prisoner before said Lakin, who was a justice of the peace for Perry township in Franklin county. On being arraigned, the prisoner plead guilty to the charge, and the justice adjudged that he pay a fine of ten dollars and the costs,' taxed at $5.30, and in default of payment thereof, he be committed to the county jail one day for each one dollar of such fine and costs, or until otherwise released according to law.

The prisoner refused or was unable to pay the fine and costs and the justice committed him to the [378]*378county jail on a mittimus issued for that purpose, and on the i8th day of November, 1905, U. S. Morris presented to the court of common pleas his petition in which he alleged that said Charles Steele was being unlawfully restrained of his liberty and imprisoned by George J. Karb, sheriff of Franklin county. It was further alleged that the pretended cause of his imprisonment was by virtue of a pretended judgment rendered, or attempted to be rendered, by one Charles G. Lakin, a justice of the peace in and for Perry township, and that the commitment of said Charles Steele, under the assumed name of Fred Francis, was issued by said justice. The petition recites the commitment and then alleges that the justice had no jurisdiction to issue the warrant, render the judgment rendered, or make the order of commitment, because said Lakin, pretending to act as a justice of the peace in issuing said process, rendering the judgment and making said order, attempted to hold court and try the charges preferred against said Steele outside the limits of Perry township in said county, for which township he was elected justice of the peace.

A writ of habeas corpus was issued on the petition and the matter was heard on evidence, which developed the fact that the justice of the peace conducted the proceedings, took the plea of guilty and sentenced the prisoner while outside the boundaries of Perry township although within the boundaries of Franklin county.

It was claimed by the prosecution that when Steele was taken before the justice who was then outside of said township, that he consented to the [379]*379case being then and there disposed of and thus consented to jurisdiction being exercised outside óf Perry township.

The common pleas court held the proceedings void for want of jurisdiction and released the prisoner. The case was taken on error to the circuit court where the judgment of the common pleas was reversed. The case is here on error to reverse the judgment of the circuit court.

Which of the lower courts rendered the proper judgment? is the question presented in the record.

It is said by counsel for plaintiff in error, in terms of bitter complaint, that “Squire Lakin roamed at large over Franklin county in company with deputy game wardens, and held court wherever he happened to be in the county, it mattered not whether he was in the township for which he was elected or not. Whenever he was confronted with a game warden and a boy he proceeded to hold court, fine the defendant and usually imprison him * * Perhaps the justice believed he had legal authority for his course of conduct, or he may have desired to emulate the customs of the circuit-rider of the early times, who was inspired with a sense of duty to carry the divine message to the humblest cabin within his circuit. Or, this justice may have concluded to dispense justice or injustice in any part of his county in certain cases in conformity to an old notion that a broken law is best avenged by inflicting the punishment on the scene where the offense was committed. Whatever may have been the. prevailing motive, it seems to have been true in this case that he took the plea of guilty and sentenced the prisoner outside of [380]*380Perry township, which was the township of his 'residence and' where he was elected to that office. But is it a case of a migratory officer carrying his jurisdiction upon his person so that he could sit down as a court in any part of the county and there hear and determine a case like the one so conspicuous in the record?

Section 6io, Revised Statutes, provides: “Every justice of the peace shall be a conservator of the peace, and shall have jurisdiction in criminal cases throughout the county in which he is elected and where he resides, on view, or on sworn complaint, to cause every person charged with the commission of a felony or misdemeanor to be arrested and brought before himself, or some other justice of the peace, and on such person being brought before him, to inquire into the complaint, and either discharge or recognize to be and appear before the proper court at the time in such recognizance named, or otherwise dispose of the complaint as is provided by law * * *.”

As to the territorial jurisdiction the above is like that conferred by “An act defining the powers and duties of justices of the peace and constables in criminal cases,” which passed March 27, 1837, and took effect July 4, 1837. See S. & C. Statutes, p. 810. There it is said: “Every justice of the peace shall have jurisdiction in criminal cases throughout the county in which he was elected, and where he shall reside. And he shall be a conservator of the peace therein * * So it is, that the territorial extent of his jurisdiction has been of long standing in criminal cases, and then as now his warrant may command the ministerial [381]*381officer to arrest the accused party and bring him before the issuing justice, or some other in the county. Then as now he was a conservator of the peace throughout the county. There is no limitation as to where the examination or trial shall be held. No court house or fixed place of holding court is provided for such officers as a •general rule, and if the magistrate has jurisdiction of criminal cases throughout the county, he has jurisdiction of an offense or crime committed in any township in the county “in which he is elected and where he resides.” And on view or on sworn complaint while in any township, Section 610, supra, makes it the duty of the justice “to cause every person charged with the commission of a felony or misdemeanor to be arrested and brought before himself or some other justice,” et cetera.

In case such a magistrate, per chance or per purpose, is abroad from his own township but in the county where “he is elected and resides,” on view of the commission of a crime, he may cause the arrest of the perpetrator on such view, or on sworn complaint, and that he be brought before himself or some other justice of the peace. Must the magistrate return to the confines of his own township in order to try the accused party? The crime was committed in the county but outside of the township where the magistrate resides and where he was elected.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Ohio St. (N.S.) 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-v-karb-ohio-1908.