BOWLES v. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
Municipal Ordinances; Common-Law Offenses; East Driving; Trial by Jury; Constitutional Law.
1. Mere fast driving, as distinguished from fast driving so as to endanger the lives of the inhabitants of a city and amounting to a breach of the peace, was not a common-law offense, and, when made an offense by municipal ordinance, an offender is not, by virtue of any provision of the Constitution of the United States, entitled to trial by jury.
2. Where a given act is an offense, both against the State, and against the municipal government, the latter may be constitutionally authorized to punish it, although it be also an offense against the State law.
3. One charged in the police court with violating a municipal ordinance prohibiting the propulsion of horseless carriages beyond a certain speed under a penalty of not less than $1 nor more than $40, is not entitled to a trial by jury; construing D. C. Code, § 44, providing that in cases in the police court where the penalty may be $50 or more, or imprisonment for thirty days or more, the defendant shall be entitled to a jury trial, and also that in all cases the court may, in default of the payment of a fine imposed, commit the defendant for a period not to exceed one year. The imprisonment provided for default in the payment of a fine is not an alternative punishment, but is provided merely as a means of enforcing payment of the fine, and it is competent for the defendant to avoid it by paying the fine.
4. A violation of a municipal ordinance punishable by a fine not exceeding $40 can in no proper sense be regarded as creating a purely civil liability so as to entitle the offender to a trial by jury under article 7 of the Amendments to the Constitution providing that, in suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed $20, the right to a trial by jury shall be preserved.
*322No. 1308.
Submitted June 2, 1903.
Decided June 25, 1903.
in error to the Police Court of the District of Columbia.
Affirmed.
The Court in the opinion stated the ease as follows:
The plaintiff in error was prosecuted in the police court of the District upon an information filed on behalf of the District, and by its assistant counsel, charging him with a violation of a municipal ordinance or police regulation which prohibited the propulsion of horseless carriages on the streets of the city of Washington beyond a certain specified rate of speed, under a penalty of not less than $1 and not more than $40 for each offense. He demanded a jury trial as a matter of right, and was refused; and he excepted to the ruling of the court in that regard. The court then proceeded to try the case without a jury,, found the plaintiff in error guilty, and adjudged him to pay a fine of $25, and, in default of payment, to be committed to the workhouse for sixty days. He has been allowed to remove his. case to this court by writ of error.
The Code of law of this District provides as follows in regard to prosecutions in the police court:—
“Sec. 44. That prosecutions in the police court shall be on information by the proper prosecuting officer. In all prosecutions within the jurisdiction of said court in which, according to the Constitution of the United States, the accused would be entitled to a jury trial, the trial shall be by jury, unless the accused shall in open court expressly waive such trial by jury and request to be tried by the judge, in which case the trial shall be by such judge, and the judgment and sentence shall have the-same force and effect in all respects as if the same had been entered and pronounced upon the verdict of a jury.
“In all cases where the accused would not by force of the' Constitution of the United States be entitled to a trial by jury, the trial shall be by the court without a jury, unless in such of said last-named eases wherein the fine or penalty may be $50 or more, or imprisonment as punishment for the offense may b& *323thirty days or more, the accused shall demand a trial by jury, in which case the trial shall be by jury. In all cases where the said court shall impose a fine, it may, in default of the payment of the fine imposed, commit the defendant for such a term as the court thinks right and proper, not to exceed one year.”
The contention of the plaintiff in error is that he was entitled to a trial by jury, — first, on the ground that the offense charged is one which, at common law, would have entitled him to a trial by jury, as well as under the Code itself by a proper construction of its provisions; and secondly, that the provision of the Code which has .been cited is null and void in so far as it prohibits trial by jury in cases where the fine may be as high as $40, and the imprisonment, whether for nonpayment of the fine or otherwise, may be for a period of one year.,
Mr. Wilton J. Lambert, Mr. -John C. Gitlings, and Mr. D. W. Baker (Mr. James M. A. Watson being with them on the brief), for the plaintiff in error:
1. The offense charged in the information is one which, at common law, would entitle the party to a trial by jury. Not that we contend that there was, at common law, any specific violation of an ordinance like the present one, but there was an offense similar to the one charged in the information for which the party charged could be indicted. At common law driving a carriage through a populous and crowded street in the city at such a rate of speed, or in such a manner, as to endanger the safety of the inhabitants is an indictable offense, and amounts to a breach of the peace, and a constable is authorized, without warrant, to arrest the party. United States v. Hart, 1 Pet. C. C. 390. The offense charged in the information comes within that class of offenses which, at common law, were indictable, and therefore, under the decision of Callan v. Wilson, 121 U. S. 540, entitles the party to a jury trial.
2. The offense charged in the information is one which can be punished by an imprisonment for more than thirty days, and therefore, the accused had a right to demand a trial by jury, and *324the contention on the part of the District of Columbia that the said offense is, in the first place, one not triable by jury at common law, and, in the second place, one where the punishment by fine is not more than $50, or by imprisonment, as punishment for the offense, not more than thirty days, cannot be sustained. In Be Bolfs, 30 Kan. 758.
3. The act of Congress gives the court' authority to impose an alternative punishment and one is just as much a punishment as another; and it seems to be unreasonable to say to a person that you can be placed in jail without a jury trial for any period not to exceed a year, not because you have committed any offense, but because you are unable to pay your fine. The question of this alternative sentence, and the effect thereof, were fully considered by this court in the case of United States v. Mills, 11 App. D. C. page 500, where this court held that the alternative sentence was punishment for the crime, and not merely incarceration for the nonpayment of the fine; and, therefore, a person so sentenced could not be released under the poor convicts act. If that be the law, then the party is incarcerated as a punishment for the crime; if not, if he were only detained by reason of the fact that he did not pay the fine, then he could be released after thirty days’ imprisonment. If the contention of the District is correct, we could have two persons, one sentenced, say for a period of forty days as a punishment for the crime, entitled to a jury trial, and another sentenced to a period of eleven months on account of the nonpayment of a fine, not entitled to a jury trial, both serving at the same time; and the only advantage one would have over the other would be that in case the fine was paid he could be released. It is insisted that such a statement shows the absurdity of the contention of the District, and that the true meaning of the act of Congress, if it be constitutional, is that, where an offense is punishable with a fine of not less than $50 or imprisonment not exceeding thirty days, the party is not entitled to a jury trial; but whenever, as a punishment for the offense, the judge of the police court has authority to incarcerate a person convicted before him for a period of more than thirty days, that person is entitled to a *325jury trial; and it is not a question of wbat tbe judge does in a certain case, but it is a question of what tbe judge may do under tbe law under wbicb tbe defendant is prosecuted, tbat determines whether or not the defendant is entitled to a jury trial.
4. The act of Congress is utterly null and void and of no effect in tbat it fails to define tbe offenses wbicb are triable by -jury, and it is unconstitutional, null, and void when it attempts to give a court a right to try a ca.se arbitrarily where there would be inflicted on tbe defendant a fine in any amount up to $50, and a sentence can be imposed on tbe defendant of any period up to thirty days; tbat where such a sentence can be imposed on the defendant, tbat tbe offense is of such dignity tbat tbe Constitution of the United States gives to tbe party charged a right to be tried by a jury. .Art. 7, Amendments to Constitution-Parsons v. Bedford, 3 Pet. 434.
Mr. A. B. Duvall, Corporation Counsel, and Mr. E. H*~ Thomas, Assistant, for tbe defendant in error.
Mr. Justice Morris
delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court:
1. With reference to tbe first ground, it is conceded tbat there was no such specific offense at tbe common law as tbat with wbicb the plaintiff in error was here charged; but it is claimed tbat there was one similar to it, tbat of driving a carriage through a populous and crowded street in a city at such rate of speed of in such manner as to endanger the safety of tbe inhabi.tants, wbicb is said to amount to a breach of tbe peace and to be an indictable offense, for which a constable might arrest tbe offender without warrant. Cited in support of this proposition are tbe cases of United States v. Hart, Pet. C. C. 390, Fed. Cas. No. 15,316; Com. v. Worcester. 3 Pick. 473; McInerney v. Denver, 17 Colo. 302, 29 Pac. 516; Callan v. Wilson, 127 U. S. 540, 32 L. ed. 223, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1301. And it is argued tbat, inasmuch as tbe offense is such a crime, the 3d Amendment to tbe Federal Constitution, wbicb provides tbat "tbe trial of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury,” and *326the 6th Amendment to the Constitution, which provides that “in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed,” imperatively require that such offense shall be tried by a jury.
But this argument is more plausible than substantial; and it is an argument that has been repeated in vain ever since the Constitution of the United States went into force. There is not, and there never was, any such criminal offense known to the common law as that of fast driving, even on the streets of a great city. The offense that was known to the common law was that of fast driving in such manner and under such circumstances as to endanger the lives of the inhabitants. Fast driving of itself was never an offense at common law. Its denunciation, therefore, by municipal ordinance is not the conversion of a common-law offense into a violation of municipal ordinance. But even if such were the case, it would not follow that the municipal ordinance is a nullity. What Judge Dillon says in his excellent work on Municipal Corporations in this regard, after a full consideration of the authorities, must suffice here without further consideration by us of the authorities in detail. He says: “Where the act is, in its nature, one which constitutes two offenses, one against the State and one against the municipal government, the latter may be constitutionally authorized to punish it, though it be also an offense under the State law.” 1 Dill. Mun. Corp. 4th ed. § 368. And this necessarily implies that, in the punishment of offenses made such by municipal ordinance, the municipality may properly proceed in its own summary way by the summary processes by which alone it can enforce its ordinances. For it must-be noted that municipal ordinances as such have nothing to do with the State or the State with them, except, of course, that the State may override and nullify them, or may specifically provide means for their enforcement. But, in the absence of State legislation to that effect, municipal ordinances cannot be enforced through State legislation; and trial by jury is exclusively one of the processes of the State, and not of the municipality. If, therefore, the off *327fense of fast driving- was not such at common law, but is only made such by municipal ordinance in this and other similar cases, we do not find that the Constitution of the United States has anything to do wdth the method of its punishment. We do not mean to be understood, however, as holding that there may not be fast driving under such circumstances and in such manner as to constitute a criminal offense, even of a heinous nature, and to make it the subject of indictment by a grand jury. But there must be such circumstances as to constitute the act as virtually a breach of the peace.
2. But it is contended in the next place that the act of Congress requires by its terms or by necessary implication that this case should be tried by a jury, since, although the fine is less than $50, which is the limit of the pecuniary penalty that justifies a demand for a jury, yet the act also provides for the infliction of an imprisonment which may last for more than thirty days as a punishment. As already stated, the penalty provided for a violation of the municipal ordinance in question is a fine of not less than $1 and not more than $40 for each offense, and there is no provision for any imprisonment whatever. The Code [§ 44] however, provides that “in all cases where the said [police] court shall impose a fine, it may, in default of the payment of the fine imposed, commit the defendant for such a term as the court thinks right and proper, not to exceed one year.” And it is argued that this provides for an alternative punishment by imprisonmnt for thirty days or more, and therefore entitles a party to a trial by jury. The vice of this argument is so patent that it requires no great amount of consideration. If it were well founded, every violation of a municipal ordinance would have to be tried by a jury; for it would always be in the power of the accused to refuse to pay a fine imposed, and thereby to force an imprisonment, if the municipal ordinance is not to become a nullity and a mockery. The result of such a contention as this, if established, it is unnecessary to describe. It must suffice to say that, under such a construction of the law, which would practically allow a party to take advantage of his own wrong, municipal ordinances would become *328worthless and municipal chaos would take the place of law. and order. The condition which would be superinduced would be intolerable.
But plainly the law means nothing of this kind. Imprisonment is not provided either by the ordinance or by the Code as an alternative punishment; but imprisonment is very properly provided as the only available mode for the enforcement of the fines imposed as punishment. Without it there would be no practicable means for the enforcement of fines. When imprisonment is provided as an alternative punishment, it is proper so to state, and it is so stated in the laws and ordinances. Imprisonment could not be imposed in this case primarily; and it is always competent for the party to avoid it by paying his fine. It would not be competent for him to avoid it if it were originally imposed as punishment.
3. It is objected, in the third place, that, if the appellant is not guilty of a crime or misdemeanor which entitles him to a trial by jury under the Constitution, then he has incurred only a. civil liability, in the nature of a petty debt, which, being more than $20 in his case, entitles him to a trial by jury under article 7 of Amendments to the Constitution, which provides that “in suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed $20, the right of trial by’ jury shall be preserved.” This argument, although advanced with apparent earnestness, requires no serious consideration by us. The fine imposed for the violation of municipal ordinance, although likened in some adjudicated cases for some purposes to a civil liability, is not such in its essence, but a penalty or punishment imposed for a criminal or quasi-criminal offense; not a criminal offense in the sense of the Constitution, but a petty criminal offense made such by municipal ordinance. The right of a municipality, under legislative authority or by immemorial usage, to prohibit certain actions as offenses against it is undoubted and beyond question. Such acts so prohibited become offenses; but they are not the criminal offenses to which the Constitution of the United States extends the privilege of trial by jury, and they can in no proper sense be regarded as creating a purely civil liability. It *329must be held that violations of the police regulations of municipalities made for the preservation of good order are criminal offenses, and punishable as such, although in their nature of a petty class, not cognizable in the tribunals of the common law.
We are of opinion that the action of the Police Court of the 'District of Columbia in the premises was according to law, and that its judgment should be affirmed. And ii is so ordered.