Court Opinion

ID: 3649695
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:04:43.979002+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:08:11.821382
License: Public Domain

By an Act ratified 28th of February, 1873, (Acts of 1872-'73, chap. 115, sec. 15, ) the General Assembly enacted that "all persons who are liable for a poll tax, and shall wilfully fail to give themselves in, and all persons who own property and wilfully fail to list it within the time allotted, before the list taker and the county commissioners, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction therefor, shall be fined not more than fifty dollars, or imprisoned not more than thirty days. The same provision is found in the Act of 1873-'74, chap. 133, sec. 19.
The bill of indictment in this case is for a violation of the above Act, and the only question presented to us is, whether the Superior Court, or a Justice of the Peace had jurisdiction to try the offender. The Constitution, Art. IV. Sec. 15, provides that the Superior Court shall have exclusive original jurisdiction of all criminal actions in which the punishment may exceed a fine of fifty dollars or imprisonment for onemonth; and sec. 33 gives to Justices of the Peace, under such regulations as the General Assembly shall prescribe, a like jurisdiction of all criminal matters arising within their counties, where the punishment cannot
exceed such fine or imprisonment. So that the question of jurisdiction resolves itself into this, is "thirty days" synonymous with "one month," as used in this Article of the Constitution? or rather may not thirty days exceed one month? For if it may, then the punishment may exceed the constitutional limit to the jurisdiction of a Justice, and the exclusive jurisdiction must be vested in the Superior Court.
We have not found in any modern case or any treatise on the law, any definition of the word "month, which makes it *Page 149 
synonymous with thirty days, or by which it cannot sometimes be a period less than thirty days. The modern authorities, which are very numerous, recognize but two sorts of months, lunar and calendar. The lunar month when spoken of in statutes consists of twenty-eight days; a calendar month contains the number of days ascribed to it in the calendar, varying from twenty-eight to thirty-one. If the word in the Article cited means a lunar month, an imprisonment for thirty days would always exceed the constitutional limit. We are of the opinion however, that whatever the word month may mean in other parts of the Constitution, in this Article it must be held to mean a calendar month. In this State before the Act of 1854, Rev. Code, chap. 108, sec. 2, the word month meant in our statute, if not otherwise explained by the context, a lunar month. Rives v. Guthrie, 1 Jones, 84. That statute however, gives to the word a new definition, viz: that of a calendar month which we must suppose was the meaning intended in the Constitution of 1868, unless there be something to show the contrary. Assuming then that "month" means in this Article a calendar month, an imprisonment of thirty days will exceed a month whenever the judgment is rendered in February, (unless it be in a few of the last days' of the month) by one or two days, and will thus exceed the constitutional limit of a Justice's jurisdiction. We cannot suppose that the General Assembly intended to make the jurisdiction of the courts dependent upon the number of days in the particular month in which a criminal action might happen to be tried, and to shift from one court to the other, as the number was less than thirty, or equalled, or exceeded it. No reason can be imagined for requiring a criminal action for an offence, to be tried for one month in the year in a Superior Court, and in the other eleven months before a Justice of the Peace. Either the Superior Court or a Justice, must have a constant jurisdiction of the same offence. And as the punishment of the offence in question can and might often exceed that which a Justice has the right to impose, the jurisdiction must be at all times, exclusively *Page 150 
in the Superior Court. The members of the General Assembly are familiar with the language of the Constitution. It is reasonable to suppose, that if they had intended to give jurisdiction to try this offence to a Justice, they would in limiting the punishment, have used the word in the Constitution, and not others, which though near it in meaning are yet substantially different. It may well be, that while they intended to limit the punishment to a moderate one, the variation was made expressly to exclude the jurisdiction of a Justice. At all events, we can only gather their intention from the words they have used, which express a different period of time from the word used in the Constitution. It must be observed that the offence under consideration here, is not expressly referred to, nor is jurisdiction of it expressly given to a Justice by the Act of 1873-'74, chap. 176, as was the case with the offence in the State v. Perry Briggs, 71 N.C. 522. Consequently the reasoning in our opinion in that case, rounded upon such express gift, would not be applicable here. The Superior Court has jurisdiction and the Judge below erred in arresting the judgment.
Judgment below reversed and the case is remanded to be proceeded in, etc.
PER CURIAM.                                    Judgment reversed.