State v. Albertson
State v. Albertson
Opinion of the Court
Indictment for winning thirty-sfeven and a-half cents, at a certain game.with cards. Indictment quashed on motion by the Circuit Court. Writ of error by the state.'
The only question in the case is, whether the offence is indictable in the Circuit Court, or falls exclusively within the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace.
The 74th sec. of the act respecting crimes and punishments states, that “in all offences in this act contained,, to which the affixed penalty does not exceed three dollars, exclusive jurisdiction is given to justices of the peace of the proper county.” R. C. 1824, p. 150
This assignment of jurisdiction is of offences in general terms, and does not depend upon the particular circumstances, which may attend the commission of an offence. And we conceive that this should be the rule by which the jurisdiction should be determined, not only where the amount of the penalty is discretionary in the tribunal that adjudicates upon it; but also where the penalty Is to be determined by a statutory criterion, according to the amount which is the subject-matter of the offence, as is the case in the offences of winning or losing, extortion, &c. In these offences, it has been urged that, when the winning or losing does not exceed one dollar and fifty cents, or the sum extorted does not exceed thirty cents, the fine cannot exceed three dollars, and of course that, to this amount, they are assigned exclusively to the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace. But we think that, by a fair construction of the section of the act under consideration, it will be found to embrace those offences only, of which the justice of the peace can take cognizance through all the variations with which they may be committed. And we think that this intention of the legislature is rendered more certain, by the difficulty and uncertainty that would otherwise attend the administration of justice under this part of our criminal code.
It is worthy of notice that the sum, by which the amount of the penalty in these cases is determined, is, of itself, a subject of adjudication, and might be considered greater or smaller, from the same evidence, by one tribunal than by another; so that to fix that sum as a line of demarcation between two dis -
In the case before us, the amount said to have been won, as charged in the indictment, is thirty-seven and a-half cents; and so leaves no doubt as to the utmost extent of the penalty; and therefore does not exhibit a full view of the difficulty that would grow out of the rule of determining the jurisdiction by the. sum lost or won. But if the sum charged in the indictment, when less than one dollar and fifty cents, would exclude the case from the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court, the same sum found in the verdict of the jury would have the same effect; and as we think it was not the intention of the' legislature to introduce this uncertainty as to the jurisdiction of this offence, we cannot think they intended to determine the jurisdiction of the offence by the sum lost or won, although in a particular case like the present, no inconvenience .would result from the adoption of such a rule.
We are therefore of opinion that the legislature, in assigning jurisdiction to the justices of the peace, had reference to offences by their statutory names, without any regard to the circumstances of the case by which the amount of the penalty is'to be determined. So that as soon as it is known that an individual has committed a particular offence, it will be also known what tribunal has cognizance of that offence. But if the jurisdiction depended on the degree of criminality in the commission of the offence, the proper tribunal that had cognizance of the offence, could not be known until something like an adjudication had taken place; and in many cases the full means of determining the jurisdiction could not be obtained until the matter was under judicial investigation; and a small mistake,
This division of the offence under consideration, between two distinct jurisdictions, might also place some offenders who were guilty in nearly the same degree, under very different circumstances as it regarded their trial, and the costs to which they might be subjected. The case of one would be assigned to the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace, and the case of the other to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court, because there was a difference of a few cents in the sums they had lost or won. Beside this, by the 77th sec. of the same act, “all criminal prosecutions, where the penalty shall not exceed three dollars, shall be commenced within thirty days next after the offence is committed;” while the general limitation of criminal prosecutions is two years
The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.
Acc. R. C. 1831, p. 195, sec. 77.
Acc. R. C. 1831, p. 195, sec. 83, 84.
Ante, p. 5.
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