delivered the opinion of the Court:
This appeal is taken from an order of the court below, quashing a writ of certiorari issued to a justice of the peace, requiring him to certify and return to the court certain proceedings that had taken place before him in a civil cause, instituted to recover a debt alleged to be due from the defendant, Basil B. Earnshaw, to the plaintiffs in those proceedings, Bradshaw & Wait. The justice made return to the writ of certiorari, and with it the proceedings that had taken place, but they do not show any such proceedings as furnish the ground for the issue of a certiorari.
It appears that an action had been brought by the plaintiffs against the defendant on matter of account, and that subsequently there was a transfer of the cause from the justice issuing the original process to another justice, and that it is of the proceedings had before the latter justice that complaint is made. In the petition for the writ of certiorari, the plaintiffs state their grievance to be, that after the defendant had filed his pleas and affidavit of defence, a jury was prematurely demanded by the defendant, and that
In the petition for the writ it is stated, that the defendant filed pleas and an affidavit of defence ; that the plaintiffs, under a rule prescribed by the Supreme Court of this District, to regulate proceedings before justices of the peace, moved for judgment against the defendant, for want of sufficient affidavit of defence, but that such motion was overruled by the justice; that the justice also refused to discharge the jury that liad been summoned; and immediately upon the overruling of said motion, the plaintiffs refused to join issue upon the pleas filed by the defendant; but the justice, notwithstanding the absence of a formal issue joined, and against the protest of the plaintiffs, proceeded to empanel a jury and to receive evidence offered by the defendant, and to receive a verdict and enter judgment thereon against the plaintiffs, on a set-off claimed by the defendant of unliquidated damages arising out of a contract separate and distinct from that sued on by the plaintiffs—the plaintiffs talcing no partñn said so-called trial. That the defendant and the justice, by their premature action in summoning and empanelling a jury before the pleadings had been settled and issue joined in the cause, deprived the plaintiffs of their right to have the cause continued, in order to enable them to take testimony of witnesses in Chicago, without which testimony they could not safely have gone to trial. In consideration of the premises, and especially because they are without remedy by way of appeal or writ of error, the petitioners prayed that the writ of certiorari should issue to the justice to certify his proceedings, etc.
There is no question of the existence of jurisdiction of the justice of the peace in this case, of both parties and of the subject-matter of litigation. The whole trouble or supposed grievance appears to be in regard to mere matter of regu
There may have been errors and irregularities in the proceedings by the justice, but they formed no ground for the issue of the writ of certiorari, if the justice had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter of litigation, and possessed the power do decide the matter in dispute.' It is only where it is plainly shown that the proceedings are infected with some fatal irregularity rendering them absolutely void, such as the want of notice, or the refusal of a hearing to a party entitled to it, and the like ; or that the jurisdiction of the cause did not belong to the court or justice assuming to exercise it, but to a different court; or that the cause involved is of a nature the jurisdiction of which is denied to any court, because not within the limits of judicial power, that a certiorari will issue to bring up proceedings for review. Patton v. Houston, 40 La. Ann. 395. Or, as the principle is stated in other cases, in order to review and quash the proceedings of an inferior tribunal upon the common law writ of certiorari, the inferior tribunal must have proceeded in the cause without jurisdiction, or its procedure must have been clearly illegal, or unknown to the law, or so essentially irregular as to be contrary to right and j ustice; and that the writ of certiorari is not permitted
In this case, the justice had full jurisdiction, and the worst that can be said of his proceedings is, that there may be errors and irregularities, but not such as to infect them with invalidity, such as to justify a review upon certiorari.
Order affirmed.
