People v. Richards

Decision Date04 September 1929
Docket NumberNo. 119,119
Citation226 N.W. 651,247 Mich. 608
PartiesPEOPLE v. RICHARDS.
CourtMichigan Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Error to Circuit Court, Jackson County; James A. Parkinson, Judge.

Paul Richards was convicted of an escape, and he brings error. Affirmed.

Argued before the Entire Bench.

John E. Shekell, of Jackson, for appellant.

Harry D. Boardman, Pros. Atty., and Owen Dudley, Asst. Pros. Atty., both of Jackson, for the People.

FELLOWS, J.

The sole question submitted on this record is the validity of that portion of Act No. 7, Public Acts 1927, which provides that one charged with an escape shall be tried in the county where the administrative offices of the prison may be, irrespective of where the escape took place. Defendant was sentenced to the Jackson prison, and while there and before his time had expired was sent to a road camp in Clinton county to work on road construction; there he escaped. Some two days later he was recaptured, and was tried in Jackson for the escape and convicted.

The writer feels bound by three earlier decisions of this court to sustain the defendant's contention. Only by the adoption of a legal fiction, which to my mind is fallacious, can these decisions be circumvented, and it be held that a crime actually committed in Clinton county was in contemplation of law committed in Jackson county. In Swart v. Kimball, 43 Mich. 443, 448, 5 N. W. 635, 637, the act was to punish the cutting of timber on state lands. By the terms of the act the prosecution might be brought in the county where the crime was committed or in other counties. Kimball was prosecuted in Ingham county for trespass on state lands located in Alpena county. He was discharged on habeas corpus, and brought the action for false imprisonment. It may be noted that all the records and files necessary to be used on the trial were located at Lansing, and it is here pointed out that all the records and files are here located at Jackson, so that the same question of convenience was present in both cases. The opinion by Mr. Justice Cooley is a most forceful one. The case has been cited by this and other courts of last resort time and time again. We quote some excerpts from the opinion:

‘The circuit judge who tried the action for false imprisonment seems to have sustained the act. In this he was plainly in error. The act is not only tyrannical and oppressive in the last degree, and such as no Legislature, even if its power was ample, should ever have passed, but it is manifestly in conflict with one of the plainest and most important provisions of the Constitution.

‘The Constitution of the state provides that ‘the right of trial by jury shall remain, but shall be deemed to be waived in all civil cases, unless demanded by one of the parties in such manner as shall be prescribed by law.’ Article VI, § 27. The right is to remain. What right? Plainly the right as it existed before; the right to a trial by jury as it had become known to the provious jurisprudence of the state. * * *

‘Now that in jury trial it is implied that the trial shall be by a jury of the vicinage is familiar law. Blackstone says the jurors must be ‘of the visne or neighborhood; which is interpreted to be of the county where the act is committed.’ 4 Com. 350. This is an old rule of the common law, Hawk, P. C. b. 2, c. 40; 2 Hale, P. C. 264; and the rule was so strict and imperative that if an offense was committed partly in one county and partly in another, the offender was not punishable at all. Hawk. P. C. b. 2, c. 25; 1 Chit. Cr. L. 177. This overnicety was long since dispensed with, but the old rule has in the main been preserved in its integrity to this day. * * *

We have not the slightest hesitation in declaring that the Act of 1857 so far as it undertakes to authorize a trial in some other county than that of the alleged offense, is oppressive, unwarranted by the Constitution, and utterly void.’

The next statute of similar purport which came before this court (section 7605, C. L. 1871) permitted prosecutions for embezzlement in the county where the principal place of business of the employer was located. The embezzlement had taken place in Wayne, but under the terms of the act the prosecution took place in Washtenaw. Following the Swart Case, it was held that the proceeding was a unllity and ‘the constitutional guaranty on this subject is too plain to be controverted.’ Hill v. Taylor, 50 Mich. 549, 15 N. W. 899.

Again the Legislature attempted to conferoriginal jurisdiction upon counties other than those in which the crime was committed by providing that prosecutions for stealing from a railroad car might be brought in any county through which the car passed (3 C. L. 1897, § 11633). And again this court held such legislation unconstitutional. People v. Brock, 149 Mich. 464, 112 N. W. 1116,119 Am. St. Rep. 684. There is an air of finality in the language of Mr. Justice Hooker, who wrote for the court, when he used the following language in concluding the opinion: ‘Whatever may have been held by the courts of other states, the cases of Swart v. Kimball [43 Mich. 443, 5 N. W. 635], supra, and Hill v. Taylor, 50 Mich. 551, 15 N. W. 899, settle the rule for Michigan.’

While these three decisions unequivocally negative the power of the Legislature to confer original jurisdiction upon counties other than those where the crime was committed, this court, in recognition of the right, and the importance of the right to a trial by a fair and impartial jury, has sustained the validity of a statute permitting the transfer of a case to...

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13 cases
  • People v. Duffield
    • United States
    • Michigan Supreme Court
    • 4 Mayo 1972
    ...In answer the court, through Justice Sharpe, said: 'The general rule relative to jurisdiction is well settled in People v. Richards, 247 Mich. 608, 226 N.W. 651, 653, wherein the court said: 'the right of an accused to be tried in the jurisdiction where it is alleged he committed crime is a......
  • Stewart v. State
    • United States
    • Maryland Court of Appeals
    • 25 Junio 1975
    ...(1924), the statute provided 'that a charge of escaping from a prison may be tried in any county of the state.' In People v. Richards, 247 Mich. 608, 226 N.W. 651, 652 (1929) and People v. Thomas, 1 Mich.App. 118, 134 N.W.2d 352, 357-358 (1965), the statute provided that one charged with an......
  • People v. McBurrows
    • United States
    • Michigan Supreme Court
    • 15 Julio 2019
    ...156 N.W. 115 (1916).] As exceptions to the Swart rule continued to mount, the camel’s back was soon to break. In People v. Richards , 247 Mich. 608, 226 N.W. 651 (1929), we rejected a defendant’s challenge to a statute providing that the proper venue in a prosecution for prison escape was n......
  • State v. Byrnes
    • United States
    • Iowa Supreme Court
    • 2 Mayo 1967
    ...that in which the alleged offense occurred, is unconstitutional. The claim is without merit. The point was decided in People v. Richards, 247 Mich. 608, 226 N.W. 651. In that case the defendant was committed to the Jackson prison in Jackson county. He was transferred to a road camp in Clint......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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