Court Opinion

ID: 6420109
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:59:07.579621+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:44.860700
License: Public Domain

Lord, J.
A single question only is presented in this bill of exceptions. That question is, Was the officer who served the warrant issued by Francis M. Thompson, a trial justice, authorized to make return of the warrant to William S. Dana, another trial justice, and did such return give to Dana jurisdiction of the cause ?
We have no doubt that such return was unauthorized, and that the justice who assumed to act in the premises had no jurisdiction.
*30It is true that from the earliest period it has been the practice for an officer to make return of a warrant committed to him to some justice other than the one who issued it; but that has been because the warrant has expressly authorized him to return it before any justice, comm aliquo justiciarum nostrorum ad pacem, &c.; a form of warrant which from a very early time has been authorized by the common law. 2 Hale P. C.112. Foster's case, 5 Rep. 59 a. It is stated in Hale P. G. that a justice may make the warrant to bring the prisoner before any of his Majesty’s justices of the peace, or before him who issued it, or any other justice; “ and then it is in the election of the officer to bring him before which justice of the county he pleases.” Or it might be issued without any such special direction, in which case it was returnable only before the magistrate who issued it.
The precise question which is raised in this case is whether an officer may in his own discretion make return of the warrant before any other magistrate than the one who issued it, when such authority is not expressed in the warrant. The claim of the Commonwealth is, that, inasmuch as the St. of 1876, c. 162, requires that the magistrate to whom complaint is made shall issue his warrant returnable before himself or some other justice of the peace or court having jurisdiction, and prescribes a form of such warrant, which form of warrant directs the officer to make due return of his proceedings, it is “ a substantial following ” of the warrant to make return of it before some justice other than the one who issued it, because the form of the warrant which the statute prescribes contains such authority, and the magistrate ought to have followed it.
We cannot adopt this view. It is too late now to say that a magistrate may not, in the exercise of his discretion,. authorize an officer to make return of his warrant before some other magistrate than himself. Whether it is competent for the Legislature to compel a magistrate in the exercise of "his judicial functions to submit to the discretion of an officer the selection of the magistrate before whom the defendant shall be tried, presents a very different question, which must be determined when it shall arise. This court has already recognized the right of the magistrate to disregard such legislative direction, by holding that the warrant is sufficient if no suph order is contained *31in it; Commonwealth v. Intoxicating Liquors, 97 Mass. 62; and, although the St. of 1876 was not then in force, the same form of warrant was required by e. 86 of the Gen. Sts., which was then in force. Nor is this defect aided by the fact that the officer was required to make “ due return ” of the warrant. There can be no due return of a warrant except to the magistrate who issued it, unless the warrant itself specifically permits some other return.
The officer in this case having assumed to make a return of the warrant in a manner not prescribed therein, his proceeding was irregular and unauthorized, and the magistrate who acted had no jurisdiction.

Exceptions sustained.