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Jones v. Commonwealth

Supreme Court of Virginia
Jan 1, 1820
4 Va. 224 (Va. 1820)

Opinion

01-01-1820

William Jones v. The Commonwealth


The Plaintiff in Error was presented by the Grand Jury impanelled in the County Court of Spottsylvania, as an Overseer of the Road, for not keeping it in repair. An issue being made up, the jury assessed his fine to eighteen dollars, and the Court gave judgment against him for the fine and costs. Jones applied to the Judge of the Superior Court of Spottsylvania, during the vacation of the said Court, for a Writ of Error to the judgment, assigning sundry errors in the record. That Judge awarded the writ, in vacation, and directed the Clerk to endorse thereon that it was to operate as a Supersedeas to all proceedings under the judgment. At the succeeding Term of the Superior Court, in October, 1820, the Attorney prosecuting for the Commonwealth moved the Court to quash the said Writ, because it was awarded by the Judge in vacation, and therefore was improvidently issued. That Court adjourned to the General Court, this question: " Can a Judge of the General Court, during the vacation of a Superior Court, lawfully award a Writ of Error to a judgment (against a Defendant), of the County or Corporation Court, in the case of a prosecution in behalf of the Commonwealth, for a misdemesnor; and ought this Writ of Error to be quashed?"

OPINION

Brockenbrough, J.

The Plaintiff in this Writ of Error was presented in the County Court, for failing to keep a road in repair, he being a surveyor thereof, and on the trial he was fined by the jury, and judgment was rendered against him by the Court. During the vacation of the Superior Court, application was made to the Judge of the Court for a Writ of Error, and it was awarded. At the next session of the Superior Court, the Attorney for the Commonwealth moved the Court to quash the Writ, as being improvidently awarded, and the question adjourned here, and now to be decided, is, whether a Judge, in vacation, may award a Writ of Error to a judgment for a misdemesnor, in behalf of the Commonwealth, against a Defendant, and whether this Writ ought to be quashed?

It has heretofore been decided in this Court, that the Act of Assembly which authorises Writs of Error and Supersedeas to be granted by a Circuit Court, or a Judge of the General Court, to the judgment of a County or Corporation Court, applies only to Civil Cases, but, that the Common Law Writ of Error may be granted to such judgment on the application of a Defendant, and without the approbation, or mandate of the Attorney General. In that case, it was, however, only decided that it might be granted by the Court: and as our Statute does not authorise a Judge, in vacation, to grant it, we must next enquire, whether by Common Law that power belonged to him. Although in England, it is spoken of in misdemesnors as a Writ of Right, yet this is only intended where there is probable cause of error. It does not, therefore, issue as a matter of course, but under the fiat of the Attorney General. If he improperly refuses, and probable grounds are laid, the Court will order him: the Attorney General may also take the opinion of the Court before it is granted. c It is clear, then, that the Writ does not issue as of course, but that some Tribunal must first judge of the probable cause of error. That Tribunal is, in England, first the Attorney General, and on his failure, the Court itself. Here we exclude the Attorney General from all participation in such power, because no such prerogative is allowed him, (nor even to our chief Executive Magistrate,) by our Constitution. It is then the Court itself which must judge of the probable cause of error, and the Judge, in vacation, is not vested with such power by the Common Law.

Emanuel Temple v. The Commonwealth, 1 Virginia Cases, 163.

1 Rev. Code of 1819, ch. 69, § 58, p. 239.

1 Chitty's Cr. Law, 749; 4 Black. Com. 391-2; 4 Burr 2551.

The following judgment of the Court is, therefore, to be certified to the said Superior Court:

" The Court is unanimously of opinion, and doth decide, that a Judge of the General Court, during the vacation of a Superior Court, cannot lawfully award a Writ of Error to a Judgment (against a Defendant,) of a County or Corporation Court, in the case of a prosecution in behalf of the Commonwealth, for a misdemesnor; and that the Writ of Error awarded in this Case, ought to be quashed, as having improvidently issued."


Summaries of

Jones v. Commonwealth

Supreme Court of Virginia
Jan 1, 1820
4 Va. 224 (Va. 1820)
Case details for

Jones v. Commonwealth

Case Details

Full title:William Jones v. The Commonwealth

Court:Supreme Court of Virginia

Date published: Jan 1, 1820

Citations

4 Va. 224 (Va. 1820)