An Act to amend and reenact § 46.1-299, as amended, of the Code of Virginia, relating to devices signalling intention to turn or stop and rules therefor.
Volume 1968 Law 99
Volume | 1932 |
---|---|
Law Number | 411 |
Subjects |
Law Body
Chap. 411.—An ACT to amend and re-enact section 4988 of the Code of Virginia,
as heretofore amended, relating to trial justices. [H B 27]
Approved March 31, 1932
1. Be it enacted by the general assembly of Virginia, That section
forty-nine hundred and eighty-eight of the Code of Virginia, as here-
tofore amended, be amended and re-enacted so as to read as follows:
Section 4988. (1) In counties having a population of six thousand
inhabitants or more, as shown by the last preceding United States
census, there may be appointed, and in counties having a population of
less than twenty thousand inhabitants and adjoining cities having a
population of not less than thirty thousand five hundred, and not more
than one hundred thousand inhabitants, as shown bv the United States
census of nineteen hundred and twenty, there shall be appointed, by
the judge of the circuit court for such county, for a period of four
years, and every four years thereafter, a trial justice for such county,
who shall be a resident of said county, or any town or city within the
geographical limits of said county. Any vacancy occurring in the of-
fice of trial justices shall be filled by the judge of the circuit court o1
said county.
(2) The courts of the trial justice shall be opened for the trans-
action of business every day in the year, except Sundays and lega
holidays. The circuit court shall appoint a substitute trial justice, anc
may at any time revoke such appointment, and shall make a new ap-
pointment in the event of such revocation, or in the event of the death
absence or disability of such substitute trial justice. In the event 0:
the inability of the trial justice to perform the duties of his office by
reason of sickness, absence, vacation, interest, in the claim, proceeding:
or parties before his court, or otherwise such substitute trial justice
shall perform the duties of the office during such period of disabilit
or inability, and shall receive for his services a per diem compensatiotr
equivalent to one-twenty-fifth of a monthly installment of the salary o:
the trial justice, deductible from the salary of said trial justice, pay:
able as the salary of the said trial justice is paid.
(3) Before entering upon the performance of his duties, the tria
justice and the substitute trial justice shall take oaths required by law
and they shall enter into bond in the penalty of two thousand dollars
each before the circuit court, or the clerk thereof, with surety, to be
approved by said court or clerks, and conditioned for the faithful per-
formance of their duties.
(4) Such trial justice shall receive a salary of not less than six
hundred dollars per annum, nor more than thirty-six hundred dollars
per annum, to be fixed by the judge of the circuit court of such county,
and to be approved by the board of supervisors of said county, to be
paid in monthly installments out of the treasury of the county and he
shall receive no other compensation for his services as trial justice.
The trial justice shall charge and collect all fees, which justices of the
peace for counties are authorized to charge and collect, and which have
not been paid in advance, and all fees collected by the said trial justice
shall be turned into the county treasury, except those fees belonging to
the issuing officers, as provided herein; provided, however, that in any
county in which there is an incorporated town or towns, fines assessed
by the trial justice for violation of town ordinances shall be paid into
the treasury of the town whose ordinance was violated: and all fees
accruing to such trial justice, in the trial of warrants issued by the
mayor or police justice of any such town in his jurisdiction, for any
offense committed within the corporate limits of such town, shall also
be paid into the said town treasury.
The council, or other governing body, of any incorporated town
in any county having, or which may hereafter have, such trial justice, as
is provided herein, shall contribute to the salary of said trial justice in
that proportion which the assessed valuation of the tangible property
assessed for local taxation in such town, bears to the total assessed
valuation of such property, assessed for local taxation in the entire
county, and provided, further, the provisions of this act giving juris-
diction to a trial justice over incorporated towns in his county, and
providing for said towns to receive a part of his fees and contribute
to his salary as aforesaid shall not be effective until and unless the
same shall be first agreed to by resolutions adopted by the council or
councils of said town or towns and the board of supervisors of the
county in which said, town or towns are located.
(5) Jurisdiction of such trial justice shall be as follows:
(a) The said trial justices shall be conservators of the peace with-
n the limits of their county or counties or corporations and shall have
-xclusive original jurisdiction for the trial of all offenses against local
aws, ordinances and regulations of said county or ordinances of cities
ind incorporated towns for which they are appointed.
(b) The said trial justice shall have jurisdiction in all civil matters
now cognizable by justices of the peace for the county, and shall, in
addition thereto, have concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit court in
all civil matters where the claim does not exceed the sum of three hun-
dred dollars (exclusive of interest), and shall have jurisdiction of all
matters and things mentioned in subsection five of section nineteen
hundred and fifty-three of the Code of Virginia, after appointment of
such trial justice. No other justice of the peace, mayor or juvenile
judge in said counties shall hereafter exercise such jurisdiction as is
herein conferred on said trial justices except as provided herein.
Nothing herein contained shall be construed to prevent justices of
the peace from issuing attachments, and warrants in civil and criminal
cases under general law.
(c) The said trial justice shall also have jurisdiction to try and
decide attachment cases where the amount of the plaintiff’s claim does
not exceed the general jurisdiction of said trial justice and the proceed-
ings on any such attachment shall conform to the provisions of chapter
two hundred and sixty-nine of the Code of nineteen hundred and nine-
teen; save when an attachment other than under section sixty-four
hundred and sixteen is returned executed, and the defendant has not
been served with a copy thereof, the said trial justice, upon affidavit in
conformity with section sixty-two hundred and sixty-nine of the Code
of nineteen hundred and nineteen, shall forthwith cause to be posted
at the front door of the courthouse a copy of said attachment, and shall
Fle a certificate of the fact with the papers in the case, and in addition
to the said posting the plaintiff, in the said attachment, or his attorney,
shall give to the trial justice the last known address or abode of the
said defendant, verified by affidavit and the said trial justice shall forth-
with mail a copy of the said attachment to the said defendant, at his
or her last known address, or place of abode; or, if said defendant be a
corporation, at its last known address, and the mailing of the said
copy as aforesaid shall be certified by the said trial justice in writing,
and such certificate shall be filed with the papers in the case, and after
the said copy of attachment has been so posted and mailed, as afore-
said, for fifteen days, the said trial justice may proceed to try and
decide the said attachment.
(d) The trial justices shall have in criminal cases the same juris-
diction for their respective counties as is now or may hereafter be
vested by general law in the police justices of cities, but nothing in this
section shall be construed to interfere with or abridge the rights of the
justices of the peace and mayors to issue warrants and subpoenas in
criminal cases, or to grant bail in anv case as now exists, and to receive
their fees therefor, but said warrants and subpoenas shall be returnable
before said trial justice for action thereon. The said trial justice shal
have jurisdiction of all misdemeanors arising under the prohibition laws
of the Commonwealth, with an appeal of right to the circuit court as
provided for by the general law with reference to appeals.
(6) The justice of the peace and mayors in all counties affectec
by this section shall make returnable before said trial justices all pro-
cesses issued by them in criminal cases, and said trial justices shall sit
at the county seat of their respective counties, and such other places as
may be designated by the judge of the circuit court, for the hearing of
all cases which may be brought before him.
(7) All the provisions of law now in force, or which may be here-
after enacted governing preliminary examinations, granting of bail,
procedure, and appeals in both civil and criminal cases cognizable by
justices of the peace of counties not affected by this act shall apply in
like manner to cases tried before the trial justices appointed hereunder,
unless otherwise provided herein except that in all civil and criminal
cases triable before such trial justices, no removal to any other court
shall be allowed; nor shall an appeal be allowed in any civil case in
which the claim does not exceed the sum or value of twenty dollars
exclusive of interest.
(8) The board of supervisors shall provide suitable quarters for
trial purposes for the court of such trial justices at the county seat,
or at such other place or places as may be designated by the judge of
the circuit court, and shall provide necessary books, stationery and
supplies for said trial justices. Such books and supplies shall be kept
by the trial justices subject to the supervision of the circuit court in
which said trial justice presides.
(9) All papers connected with any of the proceedings in the trial
of cases before such trial justices shall be returned to the clerk’s office
of the circuit court of the county, within twelve months after final
decision, and shall be properly filed, indexed and preserved, by the clerk
thereof, who shall receive the same fees as are allowed for receiving,
fling and indexing papers returned by justices of the peace.
(10) Each trial justice shall keep a docket in which shall be entered
all cases tried and prosecuted before him and the final disposition of the
same, together with an account of costs and fines.
(11) The trial justices shall have power to make and enforce such
reasonable rules of practice as are not in conflict with law.
(12) Two counties having an aggregate population of not less
than ten thousand inhabitants, according to the last preceding United
States census, or the combination of an incorporated town or city with
a county may, in the discretion of the judge, or judges, having jurisdic-
tion over said counties, be combined and one trial justice appointed for
the two counties by the said judge, or judges, and the trial justice shall
be a resident of one of the said counties, or any town or city within
the geographical limits of one of said counties, and in the event of the
combination of two or more counties, the salary of the trial justice shall
not be less than six hundred dollars per annum, nor more than thirty-
six hundred dollars per annum, to be paid by said counties in propor-
tion to their population by each of said counties, as provided in section
four of this act; and provided, further, that all cases arising in any one
of said counties, shall be tried and disposed of in the county of its
origin. In misdemeanor cases tried by the said trial justices the Com-
monwealth’s attorney shall receive no fee for his appearance except in
those particular violations of law in which the Commonwealth’s attor-
ney is required to appear by the laws of this Commonwealth and in
those cases he shall receive such fees as are fixed by law.
(13) Provided, that the judge of the circuit court of Franklin
county shall appoint a licensed attorney at law as trial justice for said
county, and said trial justice shall act as judge of the juvenile and
domestic relations court for said county, and upon the appointment of
said trial justice, the office of judge of juvenile and domestic relations
court is hereby declared to be vacant, and the board of supervisors are
hereby directed to fix the salary of said trial justice at a sum equal to
the total sum of all cost collected or collectible in all the cases tried or
heard before the justices of the peace (not including fee for issuing
warrants) in Franklin county, including judge of juvenile and domestic
relations court, for the year ending August thirty-first, nineteen hun-
dred and twenty-five, in so far as is possible, said salary to be within
the limits hereinbefore prescribed; and upon the petition of ten quali-
fied voters of said county the trial justice for said county shall be
elected by the people as hereafter provided for.
(14) The circuit court or corporation court or the judge thereot
in vacation, is hereby authorized and empowered by order duly en-
tered from time to time, to adopt such reasonable rules and regulations
as may be deemed necessary to exercise general supervisory power over
said trial justice for the purpose of perfecting and enforcing any detail
matter not otherwise provided for herein, or by legislative enactment.
All acts or parts of acts in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
Provided, however, that the provisions of this act shall not become
effective in any county, except in the county of Page and in counties
having a population of less than twenty thousand inhabitants and ad-
joining cities having a population of not less than thirty thousand five
hundred and not more than one hundred thousand inhabitants, as shown
by the United States census of nineteen hundred and twenty, until it
shall have been adopted by the board of supervisors for said county.
The provisions of this act shall not apply to counties adjacent to
cities having a population of one hundred thousand or more by the
last United States census.