Reed v. State
Reed v. State
Opinion of the Court
(after stating the facts as above). When-the appeal was taken, the Criminal Court of Appeals acquired jurisdiction of the cause, and the county court lost jurisdiction and all control over the case, and had no right to make any order or enter any judgment in said case, and any such order or action if taken would have been a nullity. It would be an absurdity to say that the cause could be legally pending in two courts at the same time. The jurisdiction of one must yield to the other. When the case was affirmed, it was returned to the county court, but only for the purpose of carrying out the final judgment of this court. As was well said in the case of State v. Turner, 39 S. C. 420, 17 S. E. 885:
“A different ruling, in the language of Chancellor Gaillard in Perkins v. Lang, 1 McCord, Eq. [S. C.] 31, note, cited in Ex parte Knox, 17 S. C. 214, involves the inconsistency: 'That after a case has been solemnly determined by this court in the last resort, a single judge in the circuit court might cause the decision to be again brought into question. This cannot be. It would utterly destroy the symmetry of the law, tend to prolong litigation and to produce endless confusion.’ ”
This is not only the law upon reason and authority, but is absolutely settled by our statute. Section 6007, Rev. Laws 1910, is as follows:
“On a judgment of affirmance against the defendant the original judgment must be carried into execution, as the appellate court may direct.”
*446 Both upon authority and upon the statute the county court should have paid no attention whatever to the pretended motion for a new trial, but should have proceeded at once with the execution of the judgment. Under these conditions no court has the right to interfere by habeas corpus proceedings, injunction, motion for'new trial, or in any manner, with the execution of the mandate of this court. There must be an end to litigation.
The pretended appeal is therefore dismissed, and the county court is directed to proceed at once with the execution of the judgment. Mandate will issue insianter.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Reed v. State.
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- APPEAL — Jurisdiction—Proceedings After Remand, (a) When a defendant has been convicted in a trial court, and an appeal is taken to the Criminal Court of Appeals, the jurisdiction of said trial' court over said case is lost, and said court has no right to make any order or render any judgment in such ease except as directed by the Criminal Court of Appeals, and any such order or judgment or action taken would be a nullity. (b) After a case has been affirmed on ajipeal to the Criminal Court of Appeals, and is sent back to the trial court, the trial court has no power to set aside said judgment, but it must be carried into execution as directed by this court; otherwise the enforcement of criminal law in Oklahoma would be involved in endless confusion.