State v. Brown
State v. Brown
Opinion of the Court
This case came before the superior court, on the binding over of the defendant to that court by a justice of the peace, on a complaint brought before him for the crime of theft, in which the property charged to have been stolen was alleged to be of the value of over fifteen dollars. The justice found that it exceeded that amount, and that there was probable ground for the complaint. On the trial before
The only ground, on which the defendant claims that such judgment should not be rendered, is, that a justice has sole jurisdiction in all cases of theft, where the property stolen does not exceed in value the sum of fifteen dollars ; and that the finding of the jury that it was less than that amount has deprived the superior court of any jurisdiction to proceed further in the case. We think, however, that by the true construction of the statute on this subject, this claim is unfounded.
The allegation of the value of the property presented a case in which the punishment, on a conviction, might, or might not exceed that which a justice had a right to inflict. On such a complaint before a justice, the statute makes it his duty to proceed to hear and, try the same, and if, in his opinion, no greater punishment ought to be imposed than he has power to inflict, he is to render final judgment thereon, subject to the right of appeal therein provided; but if in his opinion, a greater punishment ought to be imposed, the accused is to be bound over for trial to the court having cognizance of the offence. He is not merely to enquire whether there is probable cause for a charge cognizable by a higher court, and to bind over or discharge the accused; but it is made his duty to determine whether it is a case within his own jurisdiction to punish. If it is, he is to make a final disposition of it; but otherwise the case is to be transferred to the higher court. The record of the justice in this case shows that he performed his duty in these respects as the statute required,—that he enquired into the value of the property stolen and found that it exceeded fifteen dollars; and therefore that the offence was not within his jurisdiction to
The view which we have thus taken of the conclusiveness of the judgment of the justice as to the value of the property stolen, so far as it respects the question of his jurisdiction, furnishes a complete answer to the objection of the defendant to the jurisdiction of the superior court, founded on the
The justice, having had in this case final jurisdiction of the offence imputed to the defendant, provided the value of the property stolen did not exceed fifteen dollars, and that jurisdiction having been exercised, it is quite plain that the defendant cannot be tried again for this offence before a justice. The finding, and binding over by him, operates as an acquittal of the defendant of the crime of which he has final jurisdiction; and if, according to the claim of the defendant, the finding of the jury in the superior court, as to the value of the property, is tantamount to, or entitles the defendant to, an acquittal, he cannot be tried again for the of-fence, in that court. If the claim of the defendant is sanctioned, it is therefore obvious that, in certain cases of the perpetration of theft, the ends of justice may be wholly defeated, and the offender be wholly discharged, in consequence of a difference of opinion as to the value of the stolen property, between the magistrate before whom the case is originally brought, and the jury who shall pass upon it in the court to which the accused may be bound over. A construction of the statute, on which this ease depends, which would produce a result so anomalous and mischievous, would be subversive of the object for which it was passed, and should not be adopted. See State v. Arlin, 7 Foster (N. H.) R. 116.
In this opinion Hinman, J., concurred.
Motion in arrest over-ruled.
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