34 Ga. 91 | Ga. | 1864
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The case in the Court below was a certiorari sued out in the county of Taliaferro, -for the purpose of reviewing a judgment rendered by the Justices of the Inferior Court of that county, upon a return to a writ of habeas corpus issued by one of them.
Section 3958 of the code prescribes the method in which a writ of certiora/ri shall be obtained, for the correction of any error alleged to have been committed “ by any Inferior Court, or. Court of Ordinary.” Section 3960 prescribes a different method for obtaining the same writ, for the correction of an alleged error committed in any cause, “ in a Justices Cou/rt, Corporation Cov/rt, Council, or any Inferior Judicatory, or before any person exercising judicial powers! The method prescribed in the latter section was adopted in this case, and when called for trial in the court below, a motion was made to dismiss the certiorari, on the ground
This presents the question, whether the ü’iors of the habeas corpus case were the Inferior Court of Taliaferro county, or whether they constituted any one of the tribunals specified in section 3960.
Then follows section 287, which, commencing thus, The Justices of the Inferior Court have authority,” etc., confers powers not embraced in either of the other sections, some of
Let us trace the proceeding in its legal course: Section 3921 provides, that “ If the writ be issued by a Justice of the Inferior Court, the return shall be heard by at least a ma-j ority of the Justices of such Court.” It is not that the return shall be made to, or heard by the Inferior Court. The same distinctive phrase, used in section 287, “ Justices of the Inferior Court,” is employed here. That section confers upon Justices of the Inferior Court, among others, the power of issuing both writs of attachment, and writs of habeas corpus. We have seen what after-proceedings are to be had, under the latter. We will now look to the course directed in the former. The comparison will prove instructive. By section 3194, it is provided, that when the amount sworn to exceeds the sum of fifty dollars, the attachment shall be made returnable to the next term of the Superior or Inferior Court, (not being
The rule of construction, that where, in an act of the Legislature touching Courts, one Court is named, and the words “ and other Courts” follow, those words must be taken as applying to Courts inferior to that named, is not without exceptions. In Dwarris, on statutes 758, we read, “ but in the statute of Marlbridge, Cap. 19th, a provision is made “ touching essoigns in counties and hundreds, or in courts baron, or in other courts; and here, although the act beginneth with inferior Courts, contrary to rules (as is known by common experience) the general words, vel in aliis curiis, are interpreted to extend to (the King’s Courts of record, in Westminster, and other Courts of record. And the cause is, for that otherwise, these general words, should be void; for it cannot, according to the general rule, extend to inferior Courts, for
Our opinion is with the Court below, whose judgment is affirmed.