Court Opinion

ID: 6517442
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:27:57.372103+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:03.716715
License: Public Domain

BMC KELL, C. J.
Proceedings in bastardy are statutory, originating, before a justice of the peace, and are instituted by the complaint of a single woman that she is pregnant with or has been delivered of a bartard child, in the county in which the complaint is made, and must accuse a particular person of being the .father of such child — this is the inception of the proceedings, and without it there can be no further movement in the procedure the statutes prescribe. The complaint having been made, it is the duty of the justice to issue a warrant for the arrest of the accused, and on his arrest to inquire whether there is probable cause to believe him guilty. If on such inquiry, the justice finds probable cause, the accused is held to appear before the circuit court, where, if he demands it, an issue is made up, to ascertain whether he is the real father of the child. — Cr. Code of 1886, §§ 4842-51; Cr. Code of 1896, §§ 4381-90.
The complaint in this case, was in writing, conforming in all respects to the statute, and verified before a notary public of the appointment of the Governor, having the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace; and the first insistence of the appellant is, that by the terms of the statute, an elective justice only could entertain the complaint. It is not doubted that the proceeding is in its essence judicial, and that the justice exercises jurisdiction as distinguished from merely ministerial or .administrative power. The complaint is the inception of the proceedings’, and before issuing a warrant for the ai'rest of the accused, the justice must determine the sufficiency of the complaint. The warrant having issued, the justice must hear evidence, and from the evidence determine whether there is probable cause to believe the accused guilty. There is every element of jurisdiction, as the term is applied to courts and judicial officers — the power to hear and. decide a particular controversy ; and there is more, a correspondence to the statute which authorizes justices of the peace to inquire preliminarily into the commission . of criminal offenses. The Constitution (Art. VI, Sec. 26), confers on the Governor authority to “appoint one notary public for each election precinct in counties, and one for each -ward in cities of over five thousand inhabitants, who, in addition to the powers of notary, shall have and exercise the same jurisdiction as justices of the peace within the pre*188cincfcs and wards for which they are respectively appointed.” The interpretation, construction and operation of this clause of the Constitution, has been the subject of frequent decisions in this court; and it is settled, that while the notaries of the appointment of the Governor do not succeed to statutory power conferred on justices of the peace — power not pertaining to their jurisdiction, though not particularly nominated in the-statute — by force of the Constitution they are clothed ..with whatever of jurisdiction, civil or criminal, a justice of the peace may exercise. — Carroll v. State, 58 Ala. 396; Griffin v. Appleby, 69 Ala. 409; Vann v. Adams, 71 Ala. 475; Rice v. Watts, Ib. 593; Harper v. State, 109 Ala. 66. The distinction is between mere power notin its nature judicial, and jurisdiction. In Griffin v. Appleby, supra, it was held that the grant of jurisdiction to notaries public, appointed by the Governor, to have and exercise it, is as plenary as the grant of jurisdiction to justices of the peace. It was said: ‘‘The grant of jurisdiction to the one is not distinguishable from the grant to the other — within the precinct or ward for which he is appointed, the notary is, according to the words of the Constitution, ‘to have and exercise the same jurisdiction as justices of the peace.’ The mode in which the justice of the peace should exercise the jurisdiction conferred upon him, or the process he should employ to render the jurisdiction effectual, the Constitution does not prescribe. That is left to legislative regulation, and, prior to the adoption of the Constitution, had been the subject of legislation, and a system established, remaining of full force, because not repugnant to, or inconsistent with, the provisions of the Constitution. The statutes prescribing the mode in which the jurisdiction shall be exercised, and the process which shall be employed, refer in words only to justices of the peace, because enacted and existing prior to the cóiistitutional grant of the same jurisdiction to notaries public. But these statutes open and take in the notaries public appointed to have and exercise the jurisdiction of justices of the peace. Otherwise, in the absence of legislation incorporating into these statutes the words notaries public, the grant of jurisdiction by the Constitution would be barren — its energy and vitality dependent upon the legislative will. The constitutional grant *189is plenary, and whatever is necessary to make it effectual must be supplied by the common law, and by the statutes pertaining to the subject-matter.” There is no doubt that the complaint in this case was properly made before, and entertained by the notary public, and the proceedings were thereby legally instituted.
The cause having reached the circuit court, and the defendant being personally present, there was no error in requiring him to join in the issue the statute requires to be formed. — Hanna v. State, 60 Ala. 100.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.