Miller v. Busick
Miller v. Busick
Opinion of the Court
The proposition of plaintiff in error is, that there could be no jurisdiction in the common pleas without a preliminary examination in accordance with the statute ; that there was no such examination shown by the record because the paper was not subscribed by the complainant as required by the statute; that its introduction was, for that reason, error, and the common pleas, was without jurisdiction to hear the complaint-.
We think the admission of the examination was’ not error, and that the common pleas had jurisdiction. It is true that the statute, section 5615, provides that the examination shall be subscribed
And, where all other indicia of indentification specified in the statute are present, and no real doubt exists of the genuineness of the examination, it would be tlie extreme of technicality to hold the mere absence of the complainant’s signature to be a fatal defect. Under the authority of Hoff v. Fisher, 26 Ohio St., 7, and especially considering that proceedings before justices are to be treated with libera] ity, and that, as to matters within the scope of their authority, technical precision is not to be required, the provision of sec
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.