(dissenting)—There are two principal questions in this case, suggested by the state as follows: (1) the complaint on which the conviction was had before the justice of the peace did not state facts sufficient to constitute a crime; and (2) the proceedings before the justice of the peace were contrary to the provisions of the statutes governing proceedings in such cases.
Upon the first contention made, I am convinced the majority opinion in the Departmental hearing was erroneous and the dissenting opinion therein was correct.
As to the second contention, it is to be observed that, while the statutes provide that a defendant may plead guilty, .they further provide that in all cases where the offense charged involves an injury to a particular person who is within the county, it shall be the duty of the justice of the péaee to summon the injured person as a witness at the trial and to enforce his attendance by attachment if necessary; and further, that no justice shall assess a fine, or enter a judgment, until a witness or witnesses have been examined to state the circumstances of the transaction. The justice’s docket which was offered in evidence and rejected shows a plea of guilty and a judgment imposing a fine and costs. It shows, “testimony having been offered”, but is otherwise silent if a witness was sworn; nor does it affirmatively appear if the party injured was examined as á witness. Without doubt the statutes have an important purpose and should not be ignored or overlooked in proceedings before a justice of the peace. Nevertheless, the question remains was the judgment that was *368entered void or voidable only, and if tbe latter, was it sufficient, after having been performed by the defendant, to constitute a bar to another prosecution for the same offense.
There was no answer on the part of the prosecution to defendant’s plea of former conviction, to the effect that the judgment of the justice of the peace was collusive on the part of the defendant, or at all. ■ There was no presumption of collusion either by statute or other rule of law. Such an issue, if made, would be one of fact to be tried out as any other issue of fact. But the contention is that the judgment was void. The statute does not say so. The justice of the peace had jurisdiction over the crime charged and the person' of the defendant. As it is with all public officers, so it is with courts of limited jurisdiction.
“The presumption that ah official did his duty and acted within his authority is recognized in connection with criminal courts, where the record is silent, so that, if jurisdiction is obtained, the validity of a judgment wiH not be affected by mere irregularity and°want of form in the proceedings ’ ’. 16 O. J. 183,-184.
In this case the defendant submitted to trial in the justice court, did nothing to influence the judgment and performed the judgment when it was imposed. True, the amount was small, possibly a matter of some importance if collusion were charged, but in no manner affecting its validity under the present issue.
On principle, a similar situation was involved in the case of In re Casey, 27 Wash. 686, 68 Pac. 185. A trial was had before a jury, resulting in a verdict of guilty, but the jury did not by its verdict assess any punishment. Thereupon the justice assessed a fine and upon the refusal of thé defendant to pay it he was committed to jail. While so detained in custody, he applied to the superior court for a writ of habeas corpus *369which was denied and thence he appealed to this court. In the case reliance was had upon a statute (now § 1928, Rem. Code), which contains the following: “Such justice or jury, if they find the prisoner guilty, shall assess his punishment”, etc. It was conceded by the state that the failure of the jury to fix the punishment, and the action of the court in fixing it in their stead would likely call for a reversal of the judgment if attacked by appeal, hut that the proceedings were simply irregular and voidable, hut not void, for the reason that jurisdiction of the person and of the subject-matter was in the justice court, and that the court had power under the pleadings and under the law to enter a judgment of the kind rendered, although it might have been voided on appeal because of irregularities committed by the court during the progress of the case. This latter view was adopted by the court, for, after reviewing cases relied on by the appellant, and finding them to he inapplicable, the court said:
“In this case a complaint was filed charging the offense. The accused was arrested and brought into court. The offense was within the jurisdiction of the justice. He thereby acquired jurisdiction of both the person and the subject-matter. The judgment entered was also within his jurisdiction under the pleadings in the case. The following general statement of the law, as found in 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.), p. 170, seems particularly applicable;
“ ‘But it is only when the court pronounces a judgment which is not authorized by law under any circumstances in the particular case made by the pleadings, whether the trial has proceeded regularly or otherwise, that such judgment can he said to he void’, . . .”
The statute in question in that case was as mandatory upon the subject of procedure as is the one involved in the present case. In that case the judgment was within the pleadings and so it was in the present case.
*370Similarly, the case of Everett v. Cowles, 97 Wash. 396, 166 Pac. 786, discusses the conviction in a police court of one for the violation of a city ordinance. He appealed to the superior court wherein a new complaint was filed against him charging him with the same offense. In answer to the new complaint, he took the untenable position that the complaint filed in the police court did not state an offense and hence that the court was without jurisdiction over the offense, and that therefore the appeal could not vest jurisdiction in the superior court. This court said:
“But without noticing the contradiction involved in the argument, it is enough to say that the jurisdiction of the police court over the crime charged and the person of the defendant did not depend upon the sufficiency of the complaint. This the court had in virtue of the law. And having such jurisdiction, the judgment, it rendered was voidable rather than void; enforceable against the defendant until reversed or set aside in some correctory proceeding. In re Nolan, 21 Wash. 395, 58 Pac. 222.”
It follows from these cases and the reasons they furnish that, notwithstanding the alleged insufficiency of the complaint to state an offense, and notwithstanding the irregularity in the proceedings by which the justice of the peace arrived at the judgment entered, that the judgment though voidable on appeal was- sufficient upon its having been performed by the defendant to make it proper evidence -to be considered in support of appellant’s plea of a former conviction of the same offense, and that the rejection of the complaint and justice’s record was reversible error. There seems to be no question in the case of the identity of the person or of the act involved, as compared with those in the case before the justice of the peace. If there be any dispute in those respects, oral testimony may be re*371sorted to for the establishment of such identities if necessary. 16 C. J., p. 425, § 769.
The judgment appealed from should be reversed.
Parker, C. J., Mackintosh, and Bridges, JJ., concur with Mitchell, J.