Court Opinion

ID: 6520859
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 19:03:14.540087+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:08.603660
License: Public Domain

de GRAFFENRIED, J.
The act approved February 23, 1907, entitled “An act to provide for holding the circuit court in St. Clair county, Alabama, to divide said county into two judicial divisions, to regulate the said court and the jurisdiction of and the proceedings in and relating to the same” (Loc. Laws 1907, p. 61), divides the county of St. Clair into, two judicial divisions, directs the holding of terms of court, not only at Ashville, the county seat, but also at Pell City, and provides that all civil actions which arise in, or where there is a single defendant who resides in, that portion of St. Glair county constituting the Southern judicial division shall be cognizable only in the circuit court of St. Clair county, sitting at Pell City; that all actions against non-residents of said county may be brought in either division of said court; and that all criminal cases in said county shall he indicted and tried in the judicial division where the offenses were committed. The act further provides that the clerk of the circuit court of the county shall keep a deputy with all the powers of a circuit clerk, and a branch office, and all of the records, dockets, and papers pertaining to cases triable in said division, at *210Pell City. It also requires the sheriff to keep a deputy with all the powers of a sheriff, and an office with all of the dockets, records, and papers which by law the sheriff is required to keep, and which are connected with.cases cognizable in said division, at Pell City; ‘‘that all summons or process issued in suits brought or pending in the division of the court to be held at Pell City shall be returnable to the court at Pell City, and that all sales of land made by the sheriff of St. Clair county shall be made in front of the courthouse door of that judicial division where the land is situated, and if said land is situated partly in both divisions, then such sale shall be made in front of the courthouse door of that judicial division in which the execution or order of sale was issued.”
It is evident that in adopting .the above act, the Legislature intended that the circuit court, when held at Pell City — a place where it could not be held, unless expressly so provided by law — should be as distinct from the same court when held at the county seat as if the Southern division of the county, was in fact, a separate county. When the circuit court sits in the Northern division of the county, it has no jurisdiction over causes of action triable in the Southern division, and vice versa; and for all practical purposes the two courts are as distinct as if they existed under two independent legislative acts. In legal contemplation, both courts are but the circuit court of the county; but for all the practical purposes of administering justice they are as distinct from each other as are the circuit courts of two different counties. The above 'being true, we are driven to the conclusion that the above act established a. court to be held in a territorial subdivisión of a county, within the meaning of section 25 of the act, to prescribe the qualifications of jurors, approved August 31, 1909 (Acts *211Sp. Sess. 1909, p. 305). Pell City and. the division to which it belongs were segregated from the jurisdiction of the circuit court of St. Clair county when sitting at Ashville,. for the convenience of the citizens residing in that part of the county, and the manifest meaning of section 25 of the jury law is that all courts possessing jurisdiction of the trial of causes in only a portion of a county shall be restricted to that portion of the county in the selection of its grand and petit jurors. Under the ancient common law, the jury came from the vicinage, and section 5 of the jury law is but the reassertion, in the form of a statute, of an ancient common-law right.
On the 13th day of February, 1891 (see Acts 1890-91, p. 592), the Legislature passed a local law for Blount county (entitled “An act to establish an additional circuit court in the county of Blount and to provide a place for holding the same. The act divides Blount county into two parts, by certain meridian lines and streams running in a southerly direction, and provides that the jurisdiction of said court shall embrace all that part of Blount county lying west of said line; that all causes, civil and criminal, arising west of said line shall be cognizable, heard, and determined at the courthouse to be established in said territory; that all process issued in suits or proceedings arising in said territory shall be returnable at said courthouse; that the clerk of the circuit court shall keep a separate docket for causes arising within the jurisdiction of the court established by said act; that the grand and petit juries for said court shall be drawn and summoned only from said territory; that all sales of land under judicial process situated in said territory shall be made at said courthouse; and that the court shall be held by the judge of the circuit in which Blount county is embraced.
*212This act, in Lowery v. State, 103 Ala. 50, 15 South. 641, was attacked as being unconstitutional, and in that case the Supreme Court says on the subject: “It is insisted this act is unconstitutional, and the argument made, in brief, is that the Legislature has power, under the Constitution, to create inferior courts only, and that this is not an inferior court, because the act contains no provision by which its proceedings may be reviewed by a higher tribunal. When the act is examined, it is seen that it does not create a new court at all. Its purpose and effect are to divide the territorial jurisdiction of the circuit court, already established by the Constitution, into two divisions, and to establish two places of holding that court in Blount county — one in each division— and to confer upon each division exclusive jurisdiction of all causes, civil and criminal, arising in its territory. Combined, they constitute the circuit court of Blount county, as established by the Constitution, and form a part of the Ninth judicial circuit of Alabama.” Every word used by the Supreme Court in the above opinion/, involving as it did the division of a county into two judicial divisions under an act entitled “An act to establish an additional circuit court in the county of Blount,” is applicable to the case and the act now under consideration. In Blount county, and, for the same reason, in St. Clair county, the two -courts, exercising exclusive jurisdiction within their respective judicial divisions, constitute the circuit court of the county.
The contention of appellant is that, as the act to provide for holding the circuit court in St. Clair county and to divide the county into two judicial divisions created, in contemplation of law, no new court, section 25 of the jury law, which provides the method for drawing juries “for a court established'for and held in a territorial subdivision of the county,” does not apply to the circuit *213court held at Pell City, and that it must obtain its juries from the body of the county under the general provisions of the law. The argument is made — and it is extremely technical — that the word “established,” as used in said subdivision 25, means “to create” or to “make that which had not previous existence.”
The true meaning of a word can only be determined by the context. A word used in one connection frequently has a different meaning when used in another or different connection. The various sections of the jury law relative to the selection of juries, other than section 25,'have within their contemplation courts possessing jurisdiction all over a county; section 25 has within its contemplation courts possessing jurisdiction over only a part of a county. This being true, the meaning of ‘‘established,” as used in said section 25, becomes apparent. “Upon few words could there be more room for argument than upon the word ‘establish.’ It is selected by Mr. Storey to show that it is by no means a correct rule to construe the same word in the same sense wherever it occurs in the same instrument. The peculiar sense in which it is used in any sentence is to be determined by the context.” Davenport v. Caldwell, 10 S. C. 336; 11 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, p. 353.
“The term ‘establish’ is not limited to the signification of ‘to found’ and ‘set up,’ for it is often used in the sense of putting in a settled or efficient state or condition an existing legal organization or institution, as it is ‘to found’ or ‘set up’ such organization or institution.” 16 Cyc. p. 591.
The act to establish a board of revenue for Lowndes county created no new board of revenue. It simply reformed and reconstructed an existing board. The Constitution provides that each law shall. contain but one subject-matter, which shall be clearly expressed in its *214title, and the Supreme Court held that “an act to establish a board of revenue for Lowndes county” is not invalid for. the reason that, in fact, the act provides for the reconstruction and reformation of the board- of revenue existing in such- county. State v. Rogers, 107 Ala. 444, 19 South. 909, 32 L. A. R. 520. The same conclusion was reached upon the same reasoning in People v. Mahoney, 13 Mich. 481, cited with approval in State v. Rogers, supra, upholding an “act to establish a police government for the city of Detroit.”
The words ‘‘establish” and “prescribe” are often used as synonymous. Ex parte Lothrop, 118 U. S. 113, 6 Sup. Ct. 984, 30 L Ed. 108.
It is a cardinal rule in- the interpretation of a statute to so construe it as to give to it, whenever possible, its full legislative meaning. Local laws establishing two places for holding terms of the circuit court in a county, dividing such county into judicial divisions, and conferring upon each division exclusive jurisdiction of all cases arising in its territory, have been in existence in this state for many years. Courts with jurisdiction of circuit courts limited to only a portion of a county are constantly being created, and to provide for all such courts, whether circuit courts, city courts, or courts of law and equity, and whether existing by virtue of the Constitution or by legislative enactment, said section 25 was enacted into law.
The judicial determination by our Supreme -Court of the meaning of “established,” as used in the “Act to establish an additional circuit court for the county of Blount” (see Lowery v. State, supra), and in the “act to establish a board of revenue for Lowndes county” (see State v. Rogers, 107 Ala. 444, 19 South. 909, 32 L. R. A. 520, supra), had been the accepted legal meaning of that word for many years in Alabama prior to the *215adoption by the Legislature of tbe present jury law at its special session in 1909. It therefore seems from reason and authority that the jury for the division of the circuit court of St. Clair county, known as the Pell City division, must be drawn under the provisions of said section 25.
There is nothing in the contention of appellant that our construction of the act which divides St. Clair county into judicial divisions in any way affects the constitutional right of trial by jury in that .county. The local law for St. Clair county, construed in' connection with the present jury law, is substantially the same law that became operative in Blount county in 1891. The Blount county law provides that jurors, grand and petit, for the circuit court established for the Western division of the county shall come from that division alone. The Supreme Court of Alabama, in the above case of Lowery v. State, held that the Blount county law was constitutional. Since the rendition of that opinion, a new constitution has been adopted for the state, and certainly the present Constitution contains no provision in any way affecting the integrity or the binding efficacy of that opinion. On the contrary, the present Constitution contains the same clauses with reference to trial by jury that were contained in the Constitution under which we lived in 1891, and the re-adoption of those clauses by the people in the present Constitution, after the rendition of that opinion, gives to it a position as an authority which it did not previously possess. We are therefore of the opinion that the primary court committed no error in refusing to abate the indictment in this case.
It has been frequently held that a motion to quash an indictment is in the irrevisable discretion of the trial court. In the present case, the appellant filed what was termed a motion “to .quash, abate or hold for naught” *216the indictment, but the grounds set up in the motion showed that the “motion” was in reality a' plea in abatement. The question was therefore properly before us for review.
There is no error in the record^ The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.