State v. Ellison
State v. Ellison
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The Act of Assembly of September 21, 1866, section four, (13 Stat. 388,) gives to the District Court exclusive jurisdiction in all cases of larceny and of misdemeanor. The verdict in this case has ascertained that the offence committed by the appellant, Ellison, in the transaction which was the subject of indictment and investigation, was a misdemeanor, and has thereby demonstrated that according to the present law the Court of Sessions had no jurisdiction in his case, and, of course, cannot proceed further therein. In The State vs. Nathan Garner et al., heard and determined in the Court of Errors at its last sitting, the defendant, a person of color, had been indicted in the Court of Sessions for burglary, the count being so framed as to include therein a charge of larceny. The jury found the defendant guilty of the larceny. It was adjudged that the Court of Sessions was thereupon ousted of jurisdiction in the case, and judgment was arrested.
In The Slate vs. Walker and The State vs. Quick, decided at our last term, this Court held that where the jurisdiction of
But an anomaly still more surprising and deplorable has been introduced by subsequent legislation. The Act of Assembly of December 21, 1866, section eleven, (13 Stat. 494,) gives to the superior Court of law and to the District Courts “ concurrent jurisdiction of all cases in law, civil and criminal, of which, by the Constitution, the District Courts have jurisdiction.” The Constitution has invested the District Courts with jurisdiction of “ail criminal cases wherein the accused is a person of color.” The remarkable result of this legislation is, that a “ person of color ” may be tried either in the superior or inferior Court for a misdemeanor, a larceny, &c., but a white citizen can be tried only in the inferior Court. The color of a defendant will, therefore, constitute another exception to the general rule herein affirmed, that the Court of Sessions has no jurisdiction of misdemeanor, &e. The present
The motion in arrest of judgment is granted.
Motion granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.