Commonwealth v. Dott
Commonwealth v. Dott
Opinion of the Court
The jurisdiction of the court of common pleas, in the present instance, was wholly an appellate one, and the only case before it was that presented by the papers transmitted by the magistrate who had original jurisdiction of the same.
The right of appeal from the sentence of a justice of the peace, upon a conviction before him of any criminal offence, is given by Rev. Sts. c. 138, § 1; and by § 2, it is enacted that “ the justice, on such appeal, shall make a copy of the conviction and other proceedings in the case, and transmit the same to the clerk of the court appealed to.”
The alleged defect in the papers on file in the court of common pleas is, that they are not certified by the justice to be copies of the proceedings before him.
Under the provisions of the Rev. Sts. c. 138, it is to be observed that the duty of procuring and filing copies of the case does not, as formerly, devolve upon the appellant, but is required of the magistrate, and the fees therefor are to be paid by the Commonwealth. There was, therefore, no laches on the part of the appellant, in not procuring and filing proper copies.
Laches, however, of another kind, is imputed to him, and which it is said must operate as a waiver of the objection now interposed. It is insisted, on the part of the Commonwealth, that the defendant should have objected to the defect in the pa pers filed, and upon which his case was to be put to the jury, before submitting himself to a trial by the jury. This suggestion seemed at first to have some weight; but its application will be found to be too broad to be adopted in criminal cases. It would cure all deficiencies, omissions, and informalities, in the papers filed, and the party might be sentenced in the appellate court, without any thing, appearing on the records or the files of that court, giving it jurisdiction of the case. The court are therefore of opinion that the question now raised is open to the appellant.
Upon the principal question in the case, although we aie fullv
The further inquiry respects the effect of sustaining this exception. By the Rev. Sts. c. 138, § 14, full authority is given to this court, in criminal cases brought before it by exception, “to render such judgment and award such sentence, or make such order thereon, as law and justice shall require ; and a new trial may be ordered at the bar of the supreme judicial court, or the cause may be remanded to the court of common pleas for a new trial there.” Under this broad discretionary authority given to this court, in making a final disposition of a case brought before it by exceptions, the court will always look at the nature of the exceptions which have been taken and sustained. If they disclose an irremediable defect in the case presented by the government, as a bad indictment, or that the matter alleged against the party constitutes no offence in law, the party is discharged as to the case brought before the court, and no further proceedings are had thereon ; but if the exceptions arose upon some ruling of the court upon a point that may be obviated on a new trial, and which does not necessarily show that there must eventually be an acquittal or discharge of the party from the present prosecution, the court will order a new trial. This seems to us to be a case of the latter description. The appeal was well taken, and there is no reason to suppose that duly authenticated copies of the proceedings before the justice cannot be procured, and the case put to a jury under such circumstances as will fully secure all the legal rights of the defendant. The exceptions are therefore so far sustained that the court ad
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Commonwealth v. Joseph Dott
- Status
- Published