Wilkins v. State

23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 393
CourtClermont County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedAugust 15, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 393 (Wilkins v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clermont County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkins v. State, 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 393 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Wm. A. Joseph, Judge.

This is a motion by George "Wilkins for leave to file a petition in error, transcript, and bill of exceptions in this Court.

George "Wilkins was convicted and fined $500.00 and costs m the mayor’s court of Milford, Ohio, for unlawfuly keeping a place where intoxicating liquors were sold, from the first day of June. 1921, until the twentieth day of July, 1921, in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, contrary to' Section 13195 of the General Code of Ohio, and is now requesting leave of this court to file a petition in error from the proceedings had before and the decision of M. B. Scott, mayor of the village of Milford, Ohio.

There were several errors claimed and urged by plaintiff in error before this court as reasons why he should be permitted to file the petition in error.

Plaintiff in error cites the Crabbe act and claims that the affidavit, upon which the warrant for his arrest was made, is defective in that it is sworn to before Mayor Scott of Milford, Cler • mont county, Ohio, while the crime is alleged to have been committed in Hamilton county, Ohio.

In fact, this alleged misdemeanor does not come under the Crabbe act at all, but it does come under Section 13195, General Code, which provides as follows: ‘‘""Whoever keeps a place where intoxicating liquors are sold, furnished or given away in violation of Law, shall be fined, etc. ’'

Section 3, of the Crabbe act. provides, “that no person shall manufacture, sell, barter, transport, import, export, deliver, furnish, receive, give away, prescribe, possess, solicit, or advertise any intoxicating liquors, except as authorized in this act. ”

It will be seen that the Crabbe act in no place provides for keeping a place where intoxicating liquors are sold etc., and so for as this motion is concerned, we will have to look to the law other than the Crabbe act, excepting any laws that may refer directly to or by implication to the Crabbe act.

Section 19, of the Miller act, which was passed February 2nd, 1921, and approved February 9th, 1921, provides as follows:

“Any justice of the peace, mayor,'municipal or police judge, probate or common pleas judge, shall have final jurisdiction with[395]*395in tlieir respective counties of all misdemeanors arising in such counties under this act, or under laws relating to intoxicating liquors of laws providing for the enforcement of such laws. ’'

The Crabbe act and the Miller act are both law enforcement acts.

The said village of Milford is located in both Hamilton and Clermont counties.

Section 3539, General Code, provides as follows:

“When the jurisdiction of municipal officers is co-extensive with the county in which the corporation is situated, their jurisdiction in corporations embracing territory of more than one county shall be co-extensive with each of the counties in which any part of such territory is located.”

It seems clear that under this section, the jurisdiction of Mayor Scott is co-extensive with both of the counties of Hamilton and Clermont in eases of this kind.

Section 4550, General Code, provides as follows:

“Pie (the mayor) shall keep an office at a convenient place in the corporation, to be provided by the council and shall be furnished by the council with the corporate seal of the corporation, in the center of which shall be the words, ‘Mayor of the village, etc., ’ as the case may be. ’ ’

The court is of the opinion that the affidavit upon which the warrant was issued in this case is valid because the council having furnished the mayor a convenient place in the corporation in which to keep his office, he has a right to swear an affiant to an affidavit in the place provided for him by the council of said village. I mean by this statement, the mayor does not have to change the place of his office from the Clermont county side and go on the Hamilton county side of said village to swear an affiant to an affidavit for a warrant for a misdemeanor committed in Hamilton county or vice versa, if his office i's in that part of the village which is in Hamilton county, he will not have to change his office from the Hamilton county side to the- Clermont county side in order to swear an affiant to an affidavit for a warrant for a, misdemeanor committed on the Clermont county side.

[396]*396Section 3539, General Code, enlarges the jurisdiction of mayors in corporations embracing a territory of more than one county, and in construing Sections 4550 and 3539, General Code, together, the court is of the opinion that a mayor need have but one office in the village of which he is mayor in order to exercise jurisdiction eo-extensive with the counties in which the village is located.

Another matter mentioned in the argument of counsel assails the jurisdiction of a mayor or justice of the peace, residing and maintaining an office in the county outside of the corporate limits of Cincinnati, because Section 1558-41, General Code provides as follows:

“No justice of the peace in any township in Hamilton county, other than in Cineimiati township, nor mayor of any village or city in any proceeding, whether civil or criminal, m which any warrant, order of arrest, summons, order of attachment or garnishment or other process except subpoena for witness shall have been served upon a citizen or resident of Cincinnati or a corporation having its principal office in Cincinnati, shall have jurisdiction, unless such, service be actually made by personal service within the township, village or city in which said proceedings may have been instituted, or in a criminal matter unless the offense charged in any warrant or order of arrest shall be alleged to have been committed within said townshi.p, village or city.”

The criminal jurisdiction of justices of the peace and mayors of villages has always been co-extensive with the county until restricted by the different acts creating municipal courts.

The acts creating municipal courts do not offend or contravene Section 26, Article 2, of the Constitution of Ohio, requiring all. laws of a general nature to have uniform operation throughout the state as the establishment of a municipal court in Cincinnati is by special grant of Legislative power upon a particular subject. See State ex rel vs Hesse, 93 O. S page 231; State ex rel vs Block, 65 O. S. page 370; Stale ex rel vs Yeatman, 89 O. S; page 44.

The Miller act is created in exactly the same way. Were it not for the Sfiller act, the court has no hesitancy in saying, that the' [397]*397mayor of the village of Milford would have no jurisdiction in this ease, because this alleged misdemeanor does not come under the Crabbe act. See Section 9, Article 35, Constitution of Ohio. Section 19, of the Miller act, passed February 2, 1921, and approved February 9, 1921, and which was a law and in effect at the time of the alleged misdemeanor charged in the affidavit.

Section 19, of the Miller act, provides as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkins-v-state-ohctcomplclermo-1921.