Brownbridge v. People

Decision Date04 June 1878
Citation38 Mich. 751
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
PartiesThomas Brownbridge and Scott Smith v. The People

Submitted April 17, 1878

Error to Van Buren.

Assault and Battery. Defendants bring error.

Judgments of both courts reversed.

Wm. J Tucker and A. J. Mills for plaintiffs in error.

Attorney General Otto Kirchner for The People cited Brock v State, 22 Ga. 98.

OPINION

Graves, J.

The plaintiffs in error were tried before a justice of the peace and a jury on a charge of assault and battery and found guilty. The justice forthwith passed and recorded sentence in these terms: "Therefore it was adjudged and determined by me that the defendants, Thomas Brownbridge and Scott Smith, pay a fine of thirty dollars each, and in default thereof to be committed to the common jail of the county for the period of thirty days each."

The case was removed to the circuit court by statutory certiorari, and that tribunal affirmed the judgment with costs to The People and ordered that execution might issue therefor. Error was then brought. The record fails to explain whether the circuit court made, as directed by statute (Comp. L., § 5561), any order for carrying out the sentence.

The allowance of costs is admitted to be error.

The sentence which the justice passed is objected to on several grounds. It is alleged to be bad for lack of due precision and certainty and also for its departure from the provisions which define what judgment a justice may give.

The only statutes, except possibly some of mere local or special application and not pertinent to this inquiry, which liquidate the penalty a justice is empowered to inflict on persons criminally convicted of assault and battery, enable him simply and barely to impose a fine of not more than one hundred dollars, or imprisonment in the common jail of the county for a term not exceeding three months, or both, in his discretion (Comp. L., § 5566), together with such costs of prosecution as he shall order (§ 5540) and other provisions contemplate that any fine imposed may be paid during commitment as well as before. §§ 5545, 5546, 5550.

No authority is here conferred to pass an alternative sentence; neither is there any express power to imprison as a means to coerce payment of a pecuniary mulct. There is some ground for contending that there are implications favoring this power to commit to enforce payment, and Mr. Bishop lays it down that the doctrine of the common law will justify it if the statute is silent on the subject. At the same time he maintains that where no statute is found to authorize it, an alternative sentence is bad. Crim. Proced., §§ 870, 875. He says that where there are no statutory provisions for sentences in the alternative, "the judgment should be direct and unconditional and distinctly limited in its terms," and the authorities he cites and many others fully sustain him.

The doctrine laid down by Lord Holt in the habeas corpus case of Dr. Groenvelt is clear and has always been regarded as authority not only that the exact object of the commitment, as being either by way of distinct punishment or by way of coercing payment of the fine, should plainly appear; but as authority also that at common law it is not competent to sentence to imprisonment for a term fixed and absolute as a penal consequence of non-payment of a fine then imposed. The censors of the college of physicians had committed the doctor under their sentence ordering him fined twenty pounds for an offense of which they had cognizance and to be committed to jail until he should be delivered by the said college or otherwise by due course of law. Lord Holt observed "that the sentence or judgment was too general, for the cause of commitment ought to be certain, to the end that the party may know for what he suffers, and how he may regain his liberty; if he was committed for the fine, it ought to be until he pay the fine; but if the intent of the censors was to punish him, not only by fine, but also by imprisonment, they ought to have made them two distinct parts of the judgment, by condemning him to prison so long, and from thence also until he should pay the fine." 1 Ld. Raym. 213. To avert misapprehension it may be well to mention that where in cases of this kind the magistrate orders imprisonment to enforce payment of the fine, it is not only due to the formality of law, but also to the claims of substantial justice that the term of commitment should not be left to depend on the occurrence of payment of the fine, but the duration of the...

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10 cases
  • Fuller v. State
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • March 11, 1912
    ... ... 892; In re Strickler, 51 Kan. 700; ... Morris v. State, 1 Black. (Ind.) 37; Com. v ... Patterson, 1 Leg. Chron. (Pa.) 73; Cheeseman v. People; ... Larney v. Cleveland, 34 Oh. St. 599; Wallace v ... State, 41. Fla. 547; Brownbridge v. People, 38 ... Mich. 751; In re Webb, 89 Wis. 354; In ... ...
  • Ex parte McInnis
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • February 6, 1911
    ...280; Ex parte Boolig, 31 Ill. 89; Armstrong v. State, 83 Ala. 49; Gady v. State, 83 Ala. 51; State v. Peterson, 38 Minn. 143; Brownbridge v. People, 38 Mich. 751; Washbourn v. Belnap, 3 Conn. 502; Howard People, 3 Gibbs (Mich., 1854); Ex parte Peacock (Fla. 1889), 6 So. 473; Ex parte Bryant......
  • Wagner v. United States
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Ninth Circuit
    • March 16, 1925
    ...same effect, see Ex parte Martini, 23 Fla. 343, 2 So. 689; State v. Sturgis, 110 Me. 96, 85 A. 474, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 443; Brownbridge v. People, 38 Mich. 751; Donnoly v. People, 38 Mich. 756; People v. Carroll, 44 Mich. 371, 6 N. W. 871; Turner v. Smith, 90 Mich. 309, 51 N. W. 282; Mille......
  • People ex rel. Ambler v. Auditor General
    • United States
    • Michigan Supreme Court
    • June 4, 1878
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