City of Birmingham v. Reed
Decision Date | 19 July 1949 |
Docket Number | 6 Div. 841 |
Citation | 44 So.2d 607,35 Ala.App. 31 |
Parties | CITY OF BIRMINGHAM v. REED. |
Court | Alabama Court of Appeals |
Certiorari denied by Supreme Court in City of Birmingham v. Reed, 6 Div. 978, 44 So.2d 614.
Chas. H. Brown, Asst. City Atty., of Birmingham, for petitioner.
Geo. E. Trawick, of Birmingham, for defendant.
Emily Reed, after conviction and sentence in the Recorder's Court of the City of Birmingham for a violation of an ordinance pertaining to lotteries perfected her appeal from said conviction to the Circuit Court for the Tenth Judicial Circuit. She demanded a jury trial in the Circuit Court.
Said cause on appeal was docketed in the Criminal Division of said Circuit Court and regularly set for trial on January 18, 1949.
On January 18, 1949 the cause was called for trial, and Emily Reed failed to appear, and good cause not being shown for her absence and default not being shown, a forfeiture was then and there entered on her appeal bond, and on motion of the attorney representing the City the appeal was on that same day dismissed and the judgment of the Recorder's Court was reinstated and made final.
Thereafter, on March 1, 1949, on motion of Emily Reed, and over the objection of the Attorney for the City, an order was entered by the judge of the Tenth Judicial Circuit, before whom the cause had been previously pending, setting aside the order of dismissal and reinstating said appeal.
On March 16, 1949 the City filed a motion requesting said Court to set aside and expunge the order of March 1, 1949, on the grounds that it was void and without authority of law. This motion was stricken on motion of Emily Reed.
On April 12, 1949 the City of Birmingham filed in this court a petition for a common law writ of certiorari from this court to the said Circuit Court ordering that the certified full and complete record of all proceedings in the Circuit Court in said cause be forwarded to this court for review. It was further prayed in said petition that if upon consideration of the record in the cause below it be determined that said order of March 1, 1949, setting aside the dismissal and purporting to reinstate the appeal to the Circuit Court, is invalid, that same be quashed.
On that same day, April 12, 1949, this court issued a writ of certiorari requiring the record in the cause below be certified to this court, returnable on May 17, 1949. It was further ordered that proceedings in the lower court in said cause be stayed pending disposition of the proceedings in this court.
Examination of the records duly forwarded to this court pursuant to said order reveal the facts which have above been set out.
Motion to dismiss the petition for writ of certiorari and order issued pursuant thereto was filed in behalf of Emily Reed on May 17, 1949. The grounds in support of said motion to dismiss are briefly that it appears affirmatively from the facts and petition that the lower court had jurisdiction of the cause at the time the order complained of was issued; that no demurrer was filed to the motion on which the order was based nor was any plea filed thereto; that no appeal was taken from said order complained of, and the time for perfecting such appeal expired prior to the filing of the petition for a writ of certiorari.
The ultimate question, the answer to which is decisive in this case, is, did the circuit court have jurisdiction of the cause when it entered its order setting aside the order of dismissal and reinstating the cause to the docket? Interpretation and application of Section 588, Title 37, Code of Alabama 1940, would seem to supply the answer.
The petitioner has in our opinion invoked the proper remedy, for certiorari is appropriate to determine whether jurisdiction existed in the court below to enter the questioned order or judgment. McCulley v. Cunningham, 96 Ala. 583, 11 So. 694; Cushman v. Commissioner's Court, 160 Ala. 227, 49 So. 311; Ex parte State ex rel. Rush, 233 Ala. 345, 171 So. 630; Ex parte Sellers, 250 Ala. 87, 33 So.2d 349.
The precursor of Section 588, supra, first appears as Section 64 of an Act, approved August 13, 1907. See General Acts of Alabama 1907, p. 790. The provisions of said Act pertinent to this opinion are as follows:
The above provisions were incorporated in the Code of 1907 as Section 1218, and were brought forward in the Code of 1923 in Section 1938.
Section 1938 of the Code of 1923 was amended by an Act approved September 14, 1935. See General Acts of Alabama, 1935, p. 1107.
As amended Section 1938 of the Code of 1923 was brought forward into the Code of 1940, and appears as Section 588 of Title 37 in said Code.
The provisions of Section 588, supra, pertinent to the question now being considered read: (Italics ours.)
In connection with the legislative history of Section 588, supra, it is to be noted that in 1928, in Thompson v. City of Birmingham, 217 Ala. 491, 117 So. 406, the Supreme Court held that on appeal to the Circuit Court by one convicted in a Recorder's Court for violation of an ordinance, the trial is de novo in the Circuit Court, and if the accused failed to appear he was liable to the same penalties, forfeitures, and proceedings as is a defendant in case of a forfeited bail bond, but that the Circuit Court was without power under the then existing statute, Section 1938 of Code of 1923, to dismiss the appeal because of the non-appearance of the defendant in the Circuit Court.
We think it apparent that the amendment of 1935 evinced an intent on the part of the legislature to change the doctrine in respect to appeals from Recorder's Court as enunciated in the Thompson case, supra.
Emily Reed having been convicted in the Recorder's Court of the City of Birmingham had a statutory right to appeal to the Circuit Court. An appeal to an appellate court (in this case the Circuit Court) is not a vested right, but by grace of statute, and must be perfected and prosecuted pursuant to the provisions prescribed by the statute permitting such appeal. Woodward Iron Co. v. Bradford, 206 Ala. 447, 90 So. 803; Liverpool & London Globe Ins. Co. v. Lowe, 208 Ala. 12, 93 So. 765; Lewis v. Martin, 210 Ala. 401, 98 So. 635. Emily Reed's right of appeal is given by Sections 587 and 588, Title 37, Code of Alabama 1940.
Part of the defendant's appeal remedy in perfecting her appeal from her conviction in the Recorder's Court to the Circuit Court, provides that on her failure to appear in the court to which her appeal was taken, such court may, on motion, or exmero motu, dismiss such appeal. This the court did in the case under consideration on January 18, 1949, as provided in Section 588, supra. This same section, which gave the defendant her appeal remedy, also provides that when the court dismisses such appeal, the judgment of the Recorder's Court from which appeal was taken is reinstated and becomes final, provided however that the court to which the appeal was taken may, on motion of the defendant made within thirty days from the date of the order of such dismissal, set aside such dismissal and reinstate such appeal on such terms as the Court may prescribe, for good cause shown by the defendant for his absence.
The court's power to set aside its order of dismissal, a component part of the right of appeal, must be found, it at all, within the terms of Section 588, supra. When right of appeal is by statute, the provisions of the statute are mandatory and compliance therewith is necessary to jurisdiction. Ireland v. Brown, 6 Ala.App. 234, 60 So. 559. Clearly under the provisions of Section 588, supra, the Circuit Court's jurisdiction over the subject matter of Emily Reed's appeal in that case expired after thirty days from the date on which the order dismissing the appeal was rendered.
Jurisdiction of a court over the subject matter is at all times open to inquiry either on appeal or when the judgment rendered is collaterally attacked; and no consent, laches, or solicitation of the parties can cure such a defect. Whorton's Executors v. Moragne et al., 62 Ala....
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