Court Opinion

ID: 4927871
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 00:59:20.702941+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:32.668037
License: Public Domain

The. opinion of the Court was drawn up by
Tenney J.
The plaintiff contends that the warrant to apprehend him for the offence charged in the complaint on which it was issued, was unauthorized ; and that consequently the commitment of him to prisión, which was ordered by the defendant, was a trespass, for which he is entitled to damages. Iri support of this position, he relies upon the case of the Commonwealth v. Cheney, 6 Mass. R. 347, and insists, that the decision is a construction of a statute, w'hich has. been re-enacted in the Revised Statutes of this State, and therefore has been legislatively adopted ; but if otherwise, that it is applicable to and decisive of the case now before us.
It is a well settled rule, that “ if a provision of one statute receives a judicial construction, and is inserted in another, the same construction will' be given to it; but when the clause varies, it shows a different intention in the legislature. Rutland v. Mendon, 1 Pick. 154. It will bo proper to examine the statutes under which the case of Commonwealth v. Cheney was decided, and those of the Revised Statutes upon the same-subject, in order to ascertain, whether they are so substantially the same, that the legislature are presumed to have adopted in the latter the construction given to the former in that case.
*532The statute of 1783, c. 51, empowered justices of the peace to hold to bail all persons guilty, or suspected to be guilty, of the offences of which they had not cognizance, certain high crimes excepted ; and to take cognizance of, or examine into all other crimes, matters and offences which by particular laws are put under their jurisdiction. The statute of this State, c. 76, passed in 1821, contains similar language. By the Revised Statutes, c. 170, entitled “ of the power and proceedings of justices of the peace in criminal cases,” $ 3, it is provided, that “ when complaint shall be made in due form to any justice of the peace, alleging any offence to have been committed, and praying for a warrant to be issued against the person charged, the justice shall carefully inquire of the complainant on oath into the circumstances of the case, and if he shall be satisfied, that the person charged committed the offence alleged, he shall issue his warrant.” Sect. 5, provides, that when the offence is of' a high and aggravated nature, the person arrested (in the manner before provided) and in custody, may be committed or bound over for trial to the Court having jurisdiction of the case. Chapter 171 of the Revised Statutes, entitled, “ of the commencement of proceedings in criminal cases,” <§, 1, empowers justices of the peace to issue process, to carry into effect the provisions of this chapter-. And <§> 2, provides, that when complaint shall be made to him, that a criminal offence has been committed, he shall examine the complainant on oath and any witnesses he may produce, and if it shall appear, that any such offence has been committed, and there is reason to believe that the person charged is guilty, he shall issue his warrant, stating the substance of the charge, and requesting the officer to whom it is directed, forthwith to arrest the person accused and bring him before such justice, or some other magistrate of the county, to be dealt with according to law; and in the same warrant may require the officer to summon such witnesses as shall be therein named, to appear and give evidence on the examination. By § 17, “ If it shall appear that an offence has been committed, and that there is probable cause to believe the prisoner guilty, and *533if the offence be bailable by such magistrate, and sufficient bail be offered, it shall be taken and the prisoner discharged, but if the offence is not bailable by the magistrate, or no sufficient bail be offered, the prisoner shall be committed to prison to await his trial.”
The statute of 1787, c. 68, entitled “an act for the due regulation of licensed houses,” makes criminal certain acts, which are made so likewise by the Revised Statutes of this State, c. 36, and in each, two modes are provided for recovering the forfeiture incurred ; the former by information or indictment; the latter, by an action of debt in the name of the person prosecuting, or of the town or plantation, where the offence may have been committed, or by indictment. But in the act of 1787, a moiety of the penalty is appropriated to the use of the prosecutor, and the other moiety to the county in which the offence may have been committed, excepting when the prosecution is by a grand jury before the Supreme Judicial Court, or Court of general sessions of the peace, in which case, the whole forfeiture is to the use of the county. In the Revised Statutes the penalty enures wholly to the town, in which the offeuce may be committed, whether it be obtained in one mode or the other.
It will be seen that the duties of justices of the peace are more specifically pointed out and defined in the Revised Statutes, than they were by the act of 1783, and their powers are also materially different in one from the other. In that of 1783, they were empowered to hold to bail, when they suspected the person accused to be guilty. In the Revised Statutes, it is made their duty to issue a warrant on being satisfied of the truth of the charge, and only in such case; and to bind over and commit the person on having probable cause, to believe him guilty.
Judge Parsons in the opinion, in the case referred to by the plaintiff, says, “ the reasoning of the counsel for the Commonwealth would be conclusive, if the statute enacting the offence, had not so appropriated the forfeiture, and provided the mode of recovering it, as by necessary implication, to ex-*534dude the. offence.” The reason given for the exception of this offence from the operation of the statute of 1787, cannot fully apply under the statute now in force, as the forfeiture, in no mode of prosecution, and in no event, can enure to the benefit of any other, than the town or plantation in which the offence may be committed. It is quite certain that the rule of construction invoked’by the plaintiff’s counsel does not apply ; the statutes under which that decision was made are not only in terms very different from those in the Revised Statutes, but the provisions of the two are substantially unlike.
2. Was the defendant as a justice of the peace authorized to order the plaintiff to be committed, on his failure to recognize wi.th surety to appear at the District Court ?
' The statutes which we are now considering, like all others, are to be so construed, that they may have a reasonable effect, agreeably to the intent of the legislature. . Courts may give a sensible and reasonable interpretation to legislative expressions, which are obscure, but they have no right to distort those, which aré intelligible; neither is the language of a statute to be enlarged or limited by construction, unless its object and plain meaning require it.
It. will be noticed that in the Rev. Stat. justices of the peace have, by the language used, the same power, and are bound by the same duties in those cas.es where the' prosecution is by indictment only, as in those, where the prosecution may be by action of debt, or by indictment. The language used is clear, unambiguous, and comprehends all offences, not cognizable by a justice of the peace. Such being the case, some manifest inconvenience, or palpable injustice, must be shown to result from the adoption of the literal meaning, before we can be authorized to say that a different intention was entertained by the legislature. It would have been easy to have incorporated the exception, which it is contended is implied, if such exception was in fact intended ; but if .their meaning was otherwise, to have provided, that the power of justices to hold, to bail, should extend, to all cases where two modes of recov*535ery of the forfeitures wore prescribed, would be but a senseless repetition of the same provision in different terms.
There are many statutes of the United States, creating offences, which are punished by pecuniary forfeitures, a part of which in each case, arc to the use of the person informing and prosecuting therefor, and the other part to the use of the United States; and such penalties may be recovered by suit, or by- prosecutions in a criminal form. As an example, may be mentioned, “ An act to reduce into one, the several acts, establishing and regulating the postoffice department,” passed March 3, 1825. It is believed to be almost an uniform practice in prosecutions for the recovery of such forfeitures, to enter a complaint before a justice of the peace, that the accused may be arrested on a warrant, and held to answer at a tribunal having cognizance of the offence ; and yet on the principle contended for by the plaintiff’s counsel, all such prosecutions are unauthorized, and if followed by a commitment of the accused to prison, subject the magistrate to an action for damages.
This practice, which has so long prevailed, was unauthorized, if the case of Commonwealth v. Cheney, was a proper construction of the statutes under which it arose. No decided case was referred to by the Court, and we arc not aware that its doctrines have been reaffirmed. By that interpretation of the statutes, persons might persist in the most palpable violations of the license laws for a considerable time, and by absconding before a grand jury could act upon the subject, escape all punishment in a criminal form. Whether such an exemption was intended by the authors of those statutes, or would result from the language used therein, we may be permitted to doubt, without directly impugning the authority of that case ; for it may still remain as the construction of statutes no longer in force, and which have been replaced by those, which are essentially different.
The law of 1787 held out to individuals inducements to commence prosecutions by information, for a violation of its provisions, by giving a moiety of the penalty to the informer; *536he entitled himself thereto on filing the information, before giving notice to the accused ; and his right thus acquired ought not to be taken away by the interposition of a prosecution for the same offence in the other mode; and it was therefore held, that an exception was so clearly implied, that the legislature intended it. But by the present law, the town, where the offence is committed, is alone entitled to the forfeiture, and the only loss to which one, who may commence a civil suit, can be subjected in any event, will be the costs, which may arise, before it becomes known, that the different modes of prosecution have been both resorted to; this is what would seldom happen, and we think the legislature are not to be presumed, against the express language of the statute, to have intended the exception for such a remote contingency. The same inconvenience might arise on the ground, that the criminal form of prosecution, is limited to an indictment; a civil suit may be commenced, so short a time before the finding of a bill, that neither the grand jury, the attorney for the State, or the complainant, may have knowledge of it, and no .service of the writ be made upon the person charged therein.
A further reason for supposing, that the authors of the law, intended what the language imports without the exception, which it is insisted is implied, is found in Revised Statutes, c. 36, § 22, which provides that no prosecuting officer shall discontinue any legal process, commenced or to be commenced, under the provisions of this chapter, except by the direction of the Court, before whom the same may be pending. By prosecuting officers we understand those officers whose duty it is to take charge of criminal proceedings in behalf of the State; and the prohibition in the section referred to is not limited to indictments, but will extend to warrants issued by magistrates, implying that other forms of criminal prosecution, than indictments may have been intended. Besides, is it to be presumed, that when the legislature denied to the prosecuting officers of the State, the exercise of a discretion in this particular, which they possess over criminal matters generally, they intended to allow an individual, friendly to those who per*537sist in a violation of the law, by a private suit, in his own name, to defeat every indictment, which a grand jury might present; and such private suit, to discontinue at pleasure, or suffer to remain pending for the protection of the accused. Bills of indictment can be found only after long intervals ; and before the sitting of the Court having jurisdiction, attended by a grand jury, civil suits over which prosecuting officers, and those interested to have the law enforced in the criminal form prescribed, may be commenced, and thereby annul in effect, the statute, so far as it provides for a recovery of the penalty by indictment. The legislature supposed it, important, that penalties should be recovered in both modes pointed out. ¥e think injustice and oppression would not, be produced by the adoption of a literal construction of the statute; but by attributing to the legislature an intention to forbid justices of the peace to exercise the power, with which they are vested over other criminal matters, might lead in some measure at least to defeat the object, evidently sought by the authors of the statute. The conclusion to which we come is, that the acts of the justice complained of in the action, were fully authorized by virtue of the complaint and the warrant which were legally . made and duly returned to him, on the arrest of the plaintiff.

Exceptions are sustained.