Territory v. Stroud

1897 OK 130, 50 P. 265, 6 Okla. 106, 1897 Okla. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1897 OK 130 (Territory v. Stroud) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory v. Stroud, 1897 OK 130, 50 P. 265, 6 Okla. 106, 1897 Okla. LEXIS 7 (Okla. 1897).

Opinion

*107 Opinion of tlie court by

Dale, C. J.:

April 15, 1895, J. L. Brown, county attorney of Oklahoma county, filed in the district court of said county an information against one W. A. Stroud,. charging that Stroud was carrying on a saloon business in violation of sec. 27, ch. 47, Statutes 1893, relating to intoxicating liquors. The section referred to provides for keeping the windows and doors of places where liquor is retailed unobstructed by screens, paint or other articles, and also provides that upon a conviction of a violation of the statute, the person so convicted shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be fined in any sum not less than twenty-five dollars, or be imprisoned in' the county jail not less than ten days, or both, in the discretion of the court.

To this information a demurrer was filed and the trial judge sustained the same, thereby holding that certain sections amendatory to the procedure criminal act of this Territory are unconstitutional, being in contravention of the Organic Act. i

The sections of our criminal procedure act called in question by the decision upon the demurrer,'are a part of .the session laws of 1895, and were intended as amendments to the original act of criminal procedure; and it was intended by the adoption of such amendments to provide for the prosecution of certain misdemeanors by information, instead of indictment, as had been previously required under our act. The sections which are in question and to be construed by this opinion will be found upon pp. 18S-9 of our session laws of 1895, and are as follows:

*108 “Section 2. That section 4862 be and the same is hereby amended to read as follows: Section 4862. Every public offense must be prosecuted by indictment, except: First. When proceedings are had for the removal of civil officers of the Territory, or of any county, township, city or municipal officers, which shall be proceeded with as provided for removal of civil officers. Second. Offenses arising in the militia when in actual service, and in the land and naval forces in the time of war, or which the Territory may keen with the consent of congress in the time of peace. Third, Misdemeanors which shall be tried on information or indictment, as hertofore provided.
“Sec. 3. That sec. 523 of the Statutes of Oklahoma, of 1893, be amended to read as follows: Section 523. Every felony must be prosecuted by indictment in the district court. Misdemeanors must be prosecuted by information, except violations of the criminal provisions of art. 56 of cli. 2a, and ch. 47. of the Statutes of 1895. which may be prosecuted either by information or indictment: provided, however, that the district court or the judge thereof, may, by order made, direct that anv particular misdemeanor be presented to the grand jury, and when so ordered it may be prosecuted by indictment.”

Sections 4, 5, 6, and 7 which follow the foregoing, provide for the punishment upon conviction, and for the filing and verification of the information, amending the same, and the court in which it may be filed.

It is asserted in the brief of counsel for appellee that the foregoing provisions of the law are unconstitutional, because in contravention of the provisions of sec. 10 of our Organic Act. The section referred to is as follows:

“Section 10. Persons charged with any offense or crime in the Territory of Oklahoma, and for whose arrest a warrant has been issued may be arrested by the United States marshal or any of his deputies, wherever found in *109 said Territory, but in all cases the accused shall be taken, for preliminary examination, before a United States commissioner or a justice of the peace of the county, whose office is nearest to the place where the offense or crime was committed. All .offenses committed in said Territory, if committed within any organized county, shall be prosecuted and tried within said county, and if committed within territory not embraced in any organized county, shall be prosecuted and tried in the county to which such territory shall be attached for judicial purposes.” * * *

We deem it profitable in the discussion of this case to note briefly the history of prosecutions by information in this country, in order to determine, first, whether or not the legislature was adopting a novel method in procedure criminal in providing for prosecutions by information; and, second, whether or not causes may be so prosecuted without the accused first having had a preliminary examination.

Reverting to the first proposition it will be found that in most states provision is made for prosecution by information, and that there is nothing in the constitution of the United States or in the Organic Act of this Territory which prevents a prosecution of misdemeanors by information. Indeed it is now well settled by the decisions of the supreme court of the United States, that for an3' crime against the laws of the United States a person may be prosecuted by information unless the punishment for the commission of such crime subjects the person convicted to death or imprisonment in a penitentiary. (Ex parte Wilson, 114 U. S. 417; Mackin et al. v. U. S. 117 U. S. 348; United States v. Dewalt, 128 U. S. 348.)

It is contended by counsel for appellee that before the information may be filed, the accused must have had a *110 preliminary examination before a magistrate, and this view is urged because, as stated, under the law of the ■United States and universal practice in the federal courts, this right of requiring the public prosecutor to establish probable cause before the accused shall be put upon his final trial has been uniform. We are cited to no law of congress which directs a preliminary examination before proceedings directly by information may be instituted in the federal courts; but numerous cases arising in the federal courts are cited in Support of such view. It may be conceded that in the federal courts such a rule prevails, and still such rule would not prevent the territorial legislature from making a different one for causes to be prosecuted in this Territory where the offense is one against our local laws. Prosecutions, for crimes against the laws of the federal government are restricted by the •amendments to the constitution of the United States, and it has been held that art. 4 of such amendments was adopted with intent to restrict and limit the power of the United States, and place such powers under strong prohibitions. [Luther v. Bourbon, 7 How. 66.)

And by reason of this amendment the federal courts hold that a party may not be prosecuted upon an information except upon affidavits which show probable cause arising from facts within the knowledge of the parties making them. (United States v. Farrington et al. 5 Fed. Rep. 343; United States v. Turead, 20 Fed. Rep. 621; United States v. Smith, 40 Fed. Rep. 755.)

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

Related

Goodwin v. Bickford
1908 OK 6 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1908)
State v. Tucker
51 L.R.A. 246 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1897 OK 130, 50 P. 265, 6 Okla. 106, 1897 Okla. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-v-stroud-okla-1897.