Court Opinion

ID: 6683673
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:31:14.198504+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:00:54.059470
License: Public Domain

Kellam, J.
This action was brought against respondent before the police justice of the city of Huron, for an alleged violation of one of the health ordinances of the city. At the proper time the respondent (defendant) demanded a jury trial,. and it was agreed in open court by and between the plaintiff and the defendant “that the case should be tried by a jury of six, to be selected from a list of twelve names provided by the court. The court consented and the jury were regularly impaneled and selected” pursuant to such agreement. The jury found the defendant guilty, and the court entered its judgment thereon, imposing a fine, etc. The defendant gave notice of appeal, and gave an undertaking as required by law in case of appeal. In the circuit court the city moved to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction. The motion was overruled, the case retried on its merits, and the defendant acquitted. Prom such judgment of acquittal the city appeals to this court.
We have stated the facts only that bear upon the one question upon which we decide the case. A preliminary question, however, is presented by respondent’s motion to dismiss this appeal on the ground that the action is criminal, and can be brought to this court only by writ of error. Upon this question, whether generally an action for the recovery of a fine for *7the violation of a municipal ordinance is a civil or criminal action, the expressions of the courts have not always been harmonious. Municipal authority can and ought to protect the lives, health, and property of its subjects against jeopardy by regulating and even • prohibiting altogether, many acts which are allowable and innocent under the general laws of the state. Local or temporary causes will often justify such action, but it may be going too far to say that a city council may, upon its own judgment, make an act criminal in its character which by the law of the state is not criminal. The possession of such power is not necessary for the enforcement of its ordinances. Judge Dillon thinks the better opinion is that where an act is not essentially criminal by the law of the state the municipal ordinance does not make it so. 1 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th Ed.") § 432. See, also, Town of Brookville v. Gagle, 73 Ind. 117; Ex parte Hollwedell, 74 Mo. 395; City of Oshkosh v. Schwartz, (Wis.) 13 N. W. 552; Miller v. O’Reilly, 84 Ind. 168; Jenkins v. City of Cheyenne, 1 Wyo. 287. There may be difficulty in some cases in applying this principle as a decisive test of whether an action to enforce punishment for the violation of an ordinance is civil or criminal, for there would seem to be some reason for holding an act criminal which is either by the general or local law directly punishable by imprisonment; but there is no such difficulty in this case. The act complained of, and of which the defendant was convicted, was one not forbidden by the general law of the state; nor was it punishable, under the ordinance, by imprisonment as a result of the conviction. We are of the opinion that the action was a civil one, and that it was properly brought to this court by appeal. The motion to dismiss is therefore denied.
The charter of the city (Section 24) gives the police justice exclusive jurisdiction over offenses against the ordinances of the city. Section 27 allows an appeal in such cases as were tried without a jury, and in no others. As already noticed, the city moved the circuit court to dismiss the appeal for the *8reason that, the case having been tried before a jury, the defendant had no right of appeal, and, consequently, that that court had no jurisdiction to entertain it. The motion was resisted, in respect to that ground, upon the theory that six men did not constitute a jury, the charter providing for a jury of twelve; and that, therefore, it was a case tried without a jury. The action was civil, as we have determined, and it was perfectly competent for the parties to agree to a jury of less than the regular number. The law could not compel a litigant to accept less than a constitutional jury, but there is nothing in the constitution or statute which prevents his voluntarily consenting to a jury of any number. Upon this question, see Vaughn v. Scade, 30 Mo. 600; Millett v. Hayford, 1 Wis. 401; Gillespie v. Benson, 18 Cal. 410; Cravins v. Grant, 4 T. B. Mon. 126; Roach v. Blakey, (Va.) 17 S. E. 228. We think it was a case tried by a jury. There is no right to appeal unless an appeal is authorized by statute, and it was competent for the legislature to give the right in cases tried without a jury, and to withhold in cases tried with a jury. The principle is too well settled to be questioned, that, when a particular jurisdiction is conferred upon an inferior court or tribunal, its decision, when acting within its jurisdiction, is final, unless provision is made for an appeal from such decision. Black Hills Flume & Min. Co. v. Grand Island & W. C. R. Co., (S. D.) 51 N. W. 345; Ward v. People, 13 Ill. 635; Edward v. Vandemack, Id. 633; Street v. Francis, 3 Ohio, 277; Grover v. Coon, IN. Y. 536. If the law did not authorize the removal of this cause by appeal from the police justice to the circuit court, it follows that the latter court had no . jurisdiction to entertain or retry it, but should have dismissed the appeal. We think the court erred in not so doing. The case is remanded to the circuit court, with directions to vacate its judgment and dismiss the appeal. All the judges concur.