41 Ala. 153 | Ala. | 1867
Carleton & Slade produced to this court, at its January term, 1867, a certificate, and asked an affirmance upon the certificate. The certificate was given by the clerk of the circuit court of Clarke county, on the 30th August, 1866. It states, that a judgment was rendered in such circuit court, on the 17th March, 1863, in
There is another change of the law made by the Code, also significant of a purpose to restrict the affirmance upon certificate to the term to which the appeal might be taken. The section of the old law authorizing the affirmance upon certificate concludes with a provision, that “ the cause may be reinstated on the docket, at any time during the term to which the writ may he returnable, upon showing sufficient cause to the supreme court.” The new law, (Code, § 3031,) after authorizing an affirmance on certificate, declares that, “for good cause shown, the court may reinstate the cause, during the term, on payment of costs.” The necessity of restricting the reinstatement of the case to the return term» under the old law, was produced by the allowance of an affirmance at a subsequent term. Under the new law, there is no such restriction; but there is an obvious implication, that whenever affirmance is had on certificate, a reinstatement of the cause may be had during the term; and upon the supposition that no affirmance can be had after the first term, there was no necessity for the restriction of the old law, as to the time when the cause might be reinstated. No reason for the confining of the reinstatement of the case to the first term can be deduced from section 3031 of the Code, which does not apply as well to the affirmance on
By the third article of the constitution of this State, the legislature is prohibited from the exercise of judicial power. The transcript in this case not having been filed at the June term, 1864, the law, as applicable to the case, declared that the cause on appeal was ended, without a motion for a discontinuance. The determination of this question was the office of a court. The legislature, in assuming to decide the question, exercised a judicial power; for the decision whether a cause is discontinued or not, must, of necessity, belong to the courts. An eminent writer thus defines the distinction between a judicial and a legislative act: “That which distinguishes a judicial from a legislative act is, that the one is a determination of what the existing law
The judgment of the law, that this case was discontinued some years ago, would be reversed by the legislature, if the act in question were allowed the operation desired. It involves the assumption of power to define the status of cases in court, to hear and decide questions of law involved in adversary suits, and to control the judicial judgment in its application of legal principles to cases. Such a power is certainly an invasion of the province of the judiciary, and can not be exercised consistently with the constitution. The legislature can not perform an act between parties in a pending suit, and decisive of it.—Taylor v. Place, 4 Rh. I. 324; Merrill v. Sherburne, 1 N. H. 199; Lewis v. Webb, 3 Greenl. 326; Dunham v. Lewiston, 4 Greenl. 140; Bates v. Kimball, 2 Chip. 77. Nor can the legislature prescribe to the court what judgment it shall render in any case.—Holden v. James, 11 Mass. 396.
Our decision, made at the last term, that an act extending the period of limitation, so as to allow an appeal already barred by the statute of limitations, is' defensible upon the ground, that such an act decided no question of a case, and adjudged no question of right in a case, but merely removed a barrier prescribed by the legislature itself, affecting the remedy, to the trial of a case. It was held, that the period of limitation could not be extended after the completion of a bar, when the title to property would be
Motion denied.