35 Ky. 18 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1837
delivered the Opinion of the Court:
This appeal is prosecuted for reversing a final judgment of prohibition, rendered on demurrer to a declaration filed by the appellees, as lessees of a ferry over the Ohio river, from Albany hi Indiana, to Portland in Kentucky, against the appellants — one of them as a justice of the peace, the other as the grantee of a ferry from the former place, across the same river; and founded on
The Circuit Court having rendered judgment on the. declaration, for prohibition, according to the petition, the. only questions presented for revision are those arising-on the demurrer; and they may all be embraced in the following propositions:—
First. Had the Circuit Court jurisdiction?
Second. Was the declaration good?
First. The first inquiry may be subdivided into four subordinate questions:
(1.) Is an action in prohibition, maintainable here in any case?-
(2.) Is a Circuit Court an appropriate forum for the maintenance of such a proceeding for prohibiting a justice of the peace from acting in. a case coram non judice?
(3.) If a Circuit Court may take cognizance of any such proceeding — has it power to order a prohibition in a case which, though not within the jurisdiction of the inferior court in which it may be pending, would not have been within its, own cognizance, either original or revisory?
(4.) Had the magistrate jurisdiction over the cases respecting which the prohibition in this case was ordered?
First. Prohibition, being a useful and usual common law remedy, should be deemed applicable and proper here, unless abolished by statute or desuetude, or deemed inconsistent with our peculiar institutions. It has not been abolished by any positive enactments; nor can we
Second. According to the common law, superior courts are entitled to a general superintendence over all subordinate courts, for the purpose of keeping them in their prescribed sphere, and of preventing usurpation: and therefore, in England, the King’s Bench and the Common Pleas have a general, and the chancellor a qualified, authority to restrain, by prohibition, all other courts inferior to them from exercising any arrogated jurisdiction. In this Commonwealth, the Circuit Courts bear towards the County Courts and justices of the peace a relation of superiority resembling, in all essential particulars, that of the King’s Bench over the inferior tribunals of England; and are the only Courts of original jurisdiction in which a common law suit in prohibition could be maintained. If a proceeding for prohibition may be instituted in the Court of Appeals, (a point we shall not now, discuss,) it could be done only in a case in which, in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction, it has the power of controlling the inferior court by a direct revision of its judicial acts. Having no such power over justices of the peace, this Court, if it can grant a prohibition in any case, could not have ordered that which was directed by the Circuit Court. And consequently it seems to us, that, in such a case as this, the Circuit Court of Jefferson had jurisdiction if any court had.
Third. Although it is sometimes said, that the object of a prohibition is to prevent the usurpation, by an inferior, of jurisdiction which belongs to a superior court, nevertheless, it seems, not only to accord with reason and fitness, but to be well settled by authority, that an inferior tribunal may be prohibited from acting in a case in which no court would be entitled to cognizance. The fact that a court is attempting to exercise control over a case in which it has no right to act, is a sufficient ground for a prohibition, whether any other court would have jurisdiction or not. Thus, in England, it has been decided, that a prohibition would lie to a suit there before the
Fourth. The authority of the Circuit Court to order the prohibition depends altogether on the assumed fact, that the justice of the peace had no jurisdiction over the cases in which he was attempting to proceed; for it is well settled that a writ of prohibition does not lie to prevent a court from deciding erroneously, or from enforcing an erroneous judgment in a case in which it has a right to adjudicate; but can be sustained only for preventing usurpation of judicial power by a court which has no authority to decide the case in which it assumes the right to act judicially.
The counsel for the defendants in error, conceding the correctness of the foregoing proposition, and admitting also (as we understood him) that, if the legislative enactment which the justice was attempting to enforce, and which declares that justices of the peace shall have jurisdiction to enforce the penalties denounced by it, be constitutional, his jurisdiction is unquestionable, and therefore the prohibition was extra-judicial—yet, insists, that the statute is unconstitutional, and that, therefore, as it could confer no authority, there was no jurisdiction in any court to render a judgment for the penalty prescribed for a violation of it.
Whether any provision in the act of 1836, should be deemed repugnant to that clause in the Federal consti
And a still more interesting and decisive enquiry might be, whether the statute of 1836 is inconsistent with that provision in the fundamental compact between Virginia and Kentucky, which guaranties to the States opposite to them, on the Ohio, a concurrent jurisdiction, over that river.
Jurisdiction, unqualified, being, as it is, the sovereign, authority to make, decide on, and execute laws, a concurrence of jurisdiction, therefore, must entitle Indiana. to as much power — legislative, judiciary, and executive as that possessed by Kentucky, over so much of the Ohio river as flows between them; and consequently, neither of them can, consistently with the compact, exercise any authority over their common river, so as to destroy, or impair, or obstruct the concurrent rights of the other.
But, as this Court is not inclined to express even an intimation respecting the constitutionality of a legislative act, unless a judicial opinion on such a point be essential to the decision of the case before it, we are not now disposed to moot the questions just suggested, or to give an opinion respecting them; because, in our judgment, if the unconstitutionality of the act of 1836 be admitted, nevertheless, the magistrate below had
Each warrant being of the nature of an action of debt for a sum of money not exceeding fifty dollars, we cannot perceive why, if any court could have exercised jurisdiction, a justice of the peace could not be entitled to cognizance under the statute of 1828, extending his jurisdiction to demands not exceeding fifty dollars, arising from contract, express or implied; for it is well settled, that the law implies a contract to pay every penalty which it prescribes, and that an action of debt may be maintained to recover it, unless some other exclusive remedy be provided.
When a warrant for a debt of fifty dollars was returned executed, the question to be decided, was, whether the defendants owed the plaintiff the amount claimed; or any sum within the jurisdiction of the officiating magistrate. If the act of 1836 be unconstitutional, and therefore void, and if also, the magistrate would not, independently of that statute, have had jurisdiction to decide on a demand for fifty dollars claimed as a penalty due from the defendants to the plaintiff in the warrant, there could be no doubt that he would have had no jurisdiction; because his only authority would have been a void statute, which could confer no power. But if, without the enactment of 1838, he had jurisdiction over a suit for debt, on a claim not exceeding fifty dollars, the fact that there was no debt, because the statute under the sanction of which alone it could exist, was void, could not either oust or translate the jurisdiction to decide whether the debt, as claimed, was due or not. If the statute be unconstitutional, he ought to have so decided, and consequently he erred in rendering a judgment for the plaintiff in the warrant, and that error might have been corrected by an appeal to the Circuit Court.
If, instead of a penality of fifty dollars, the statute had denounced one of five hundred dollars, and an action of debt had been brought in the Circuit Court of the county in which the warrant was issued, could it have been said that that court had no jurisdiction upon the hypothesis that the statute is unconstitutional, and therefore no penalty had been incurred?
In the case of Tobias Watkins, that question has been, in effect, decided in the negative. In that case, it was contended by the counsel of Watkins, that the indictment, under which he had been convicted and imprisoned, did not charge any offence of which the Court had cognizance, and that, therefore, the judgment was void, and his imprisonment consequently illegal. But the Supreme Court overruled his application for a habeas corpus, because although, for the reason just suggested, the judgment was erroneous, nevertheless, as the court which rendered it had criminal jurisdiction in similar cases, its judgment was not void, and observed as follows: “To “determine whether the offence charged in the indictment be, legally punishable or not, is among the most “unquestionable of its (the circuit court’s) powers and “duties. The decision of this question is the exercise “of jurisdiction, whether the judgment be for or against “the prisoner. The judgment is equally binding in the “one case and in the other; and must remain in full “force, unless reversed regularly by a proper superior “ court capable of reversing it.
“Had any offence against the laws of the United “States been in fact committed, the Circuit Court for "the District of Columbia could take cognizance of its
And in Williams et al. vs. Anreyd et al. 7 Cranch, 423, it was decided that the condemnation of goods captured under the Milan decree was not void for want of jurisdiction in the French Court of Prize in which it was pronounced, even though the Supreme Court of the United States was clearly of the opinion, that the decree of Milan was a palpable violation of the law of nations, and therefore, the goods were not prize, nor liable to condemnation as such.
The principle of those cases is applicable to this; and, when applied, leads to the conclusion that the magistrate having jurisdiction over the subject matter (debt on implied contract) and the amount (fifty dollars,) had a right to decide whether the penalty sued for was legally recoverable, or, in other words, whether the statute under which it was claimed, was valid or void; and that if the statute be unconstitutional, that fact does not show that the magistrate had no jurisdiction over the suit, but would prove only that his judgment was erroneous.
In England, a prohibition may go to a spiritual court, if it decide erroneously respecting the common or statute law. But the reason is only because such a court has no jurisdiction, except in matters controlled by the civil and canon laws.
In this case, the magistrate having a general jurisdiction over demands ex contractu amounting to not more than fifty dollars, the only question was, not whether he could adjudicate upon the warrant, but how he should decide— and consequently, he had a right to adjudicate, and therefore to decide whether the statute, in virtue of which the sum of fifty dollars was claimed, was binding or void.
Had he decided that the statute of 1836 is unconstitutional, and that, therefore, the plaintiff in the warrants was entitled to nothing, and should pay the costs — might
II. As the warrants were against the appellants jointly, and all for the like cause, we perceive no solid objection to a joint declaration by all, to prohibit proceeding in any and all of the cases, either before or after judgment; and there can be no doubt on the score of authority, that the magistrate was not improperly joined as a co-defendant.
Nor was it necessary, in such a case as this, to aver that a plea to the jurisdiction had been overruled; for if the magistrate had no jurisdiction, that fact appeared on the face of the proceedings, and in such a case, there being nothing extraneous to plead, a prohibition may be granted, either before or after judgment, without plea, because the defendant in the warrant could not by consent or waiver, confer jurisdiction, if, in consequence of the alleged unconstitutionality of the statute of 1836, the magistrate had no cognizance over the case. It is only when a court may acquire jurisdiction by consent, or waiver of objection, or by default, that a plea to the jurisdiction is necessary to the granting of a prohibition. Jacob's, Law Dict., and Comyn's Dig., title Prohibition.
But the objection to the declaration chiefly relied on in the argument, was that it is not qui tam.
Anciently, a common law court would not grant a prohibition unless there had been some contempt in proceeding after the service of an original writ of prohibition
But the modern practice has been to dispense with the original writ of prohibition, and, in lieu of it, to file, in the first instance, in a common law court, a suggestion of facts, with a prayer for prohibition; and thereupon obtain a rule to show cause why a prohibition should not be issued; upon the return of which, either the court or the party cited may require a declaration. And, in such a proceeding, it is evident that, prior to the filing of the declaration, there can have been no contempt in fact, for which damages could be recovered; and therefore, in such a case, the suggestion of contempt, and the qui tam form of declaring, are mere fictions which are intraversable. Croucher vs. Collins, 1 Saunders's Rep. 136, n. 1, 2, 3. And consequently, a failure to aver that a writ of prohibition had been delivered, is no cause of demurrer. Ibid. n. 3, and Bishop vs. Eagle, 11 Mod. 263.
It must be obvious, therefore, that when, as in this case, and in cases generally now, there has been no contempt, and the party declaring is not entitled to, and does not sue for, damages, the ancient fiction is not only unnecessary, but superfluous. And if so, the declaration need not be, and, in strict propriety, should not be, qui tam.
Moreover, it is admitted to be only matter of form; and therefore, the omission of it here, now, cannot be fatal on demurrer.
What has been already said is sufficient to show, that the judgment should not be deemed erroneous on the ground that it prohibits proceeding in more cases than one, and both before and after judgment.
There is, therefore, in the opinion of this Court, no other error in the record than the one resulting from the inappropriateness of proceeding by a writ of prohibition,
Because there was no proper cause for a writ of prohibition, the judgment must be reversed.
Wherefore, it is considered by this court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to sustain the demurrer to the declaration, and give judgment of consultation, for the appellants.