State ex rel. Hunter v. Judges of the Ninth & Seventeenth Judicial Districts
State ex rel. Hunter v. Judges of the Ninth & Seventeenth Judicial Districts
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
An indictment for murder is awaiting trial in the parish of Bapides. P. M. Bichardson, is the party accused, and he is the
The judges answer that the law requiring their interchange is unconstitutional, and the judge of the ninth district also pleads want of jurisdiction, in this to wit, that this court can issue a mandamus only in aid of its appellate jurisdiction, and that jurisdiction is restricted to those cases in- which the punishment of death, or imprisonment at hard labor, or a fine exceeding three hundred dollars, is actually imposed. •
The criminal proceeding is not before us now, but an original process, the object of which is to ascertain whether a judge wrongfully refuses to perform what is alleged to be his duty, and to compel its performance if that refusal is wrongful. The alleged duty is to interchange with the judge of an adjoining district for the purpose of trying, or having tried .a prosecution for murder, and our inquiry is confined to the question of whether the law which imposes that duty upon him is constitutional. "The exception to the jurisdiction is overruled.
The constitution prescribes that a judge shall select a lawyer to try refused cases in which he is not personally interested, and when he is thus •interested the parish judge must be called on to try the case if it be in ;the district court, art. 90. All the cases in which a judge may be refused are thus divided into two classes, the ingredient of personal interest being the distinctive feature of the one, and the want of it that of the • other. It seems to have been the special object of that article to con•trive a mode by which the cases, in which a judge is recused, might be ¡speedily tried and without the delay and inconvenience consequent upon .an interchange of judges.. There is a careful omission of any provision touching such interchange, although it had been of frequent practice .under the constitution of >1852. The revisal of the statutes, made in 1870, reproduces the law of 1858 which dictated to the district attorney the •course followed in the present instance, and it is argued by him that the .insertion of that law in the revisal, with article 90 of the constitution of T868 in force, shews that a conflict between them was not then supposed to exist.
Nevertheless we think they are in conflict, and that section 1068 of the .Eevised Statutes must therefore be declared null.
We are very sensible of the grave omission to provide for such cases, and of the danger which.might sometimes attend the exercise of the power to appoint a lawyer, where the prosecution, if successful, would entail painful consequences upon the judge. Our only answer to this appeal to our perception of the unfitness of entrusting this power to the judge is ita lex scripta est, and we must assume that a judge, in exercising this delicate function, will be more than ordinarily careful to select a lawyer whose ability and impartiality is both unquestioned and unquestionable so that the administration of the lp,w may be above reproach.
It is therefore ordered that the provisional writ heretofore granted he set aside, and the peremptory mandamus is refused at the costs of the relator.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State ex rel. E. G. Hunter, District Attorney v. Judges of the Ninth and Seventeenth Judicial Districts
- Status
- Published