47 N.C. 288 | N.C. | 1855
The petition for the certiorari sets forth as follows: "That at the February term, 1855, of the county court of Wake, the said John Kane was licensed by the said court to retail spirituous liquors by the small measure, within the limits of the city of Raleigh, contrary to the act of the General Assembly, passed 28th of January, 1851, for the government of the same: the said John Kane not having produced to the said court the permission in writing of your petitioners (who were the board of commissioners at the time of the application) to make the same, to the said court."
That "when the said John Kane made the above application, your petitioners interposed and objected thereto, whereupon the said John Kane exhibited to the said court a permission in writing by a board now, and at the time of the said application, out of office, to wit: the board of commissioners elected to serve for the year 1854. Thereupon, your petitioners filed in said court, a certified copy of the resolution of the board of commissioners of Raleigh, subsequently passed, refusing to permit the application to be made — revoking and repealing the former order, and certifying the same proceeding for the information of the court."
"But so it is, may it please your Honor, notwithstanding the objection and remonstrance of the board of commissioners of the city of Raleigh, c., the said court, seven justices being present, did order and adjudge that the said John Kane was entitled to retail spirituous liquors within the city of Raleigh, and did license him accordingly."
"Your petitioners, being then advised, and believing the said judgment, order and decree to be unlawful, respectfully prayed an appeal therefrom to the superior court of Wake county, at the same time tendering a bond for the costs of the appeal with security; but the said prayer and the said bond were both rejected."
The prayer of this petition is for a writ, commanding the county court of Wake to certify the proceedings in the premises to the next superior court. The order was made, and the *290 writ having issued, the proceedings of the county court were certified accordingly.
The answer of the defendant admits the facts above set out and insists that the same are insufficient, in law, to authorise the extraordinary writ of certiorari, and prays that the petition be dismissed.
Upon consideration of the whole matter, his Honor adjudged that the petition be dismissed.
Whereupon the petitioners prayed an appeal to this court, which was granted.
1. I maintain that the remedy is by certiorari: the object of that writ is simply to bring up the proceedings, to the end they may be quashed if unlawful. The remedy is not confined to cases quasi appeal, but to all cases of usurped power in the county court, Brooks v. Morgan, 5 Ire. 484-5, bottom of the last page, and cases there cited; see also Jacobs L.D. Error, sec. 2; Dr. Groenwelt's case, 1 Salk, 144, s. c. 263. Allen v.Williams, 1 Hayw. 17; Perry v. Perry, (Nash now C. J. arg.) N.C. T. R. 175, 4 Bl. C. 272, to show that wherever the court acts by virtue of an act of Assembly, and not according to the course of the common law, the remedy is by certiorari and not writ of error, as in the case of Highways, 2 Hawk. P. C., c. 27, sec. 38; Comms. v. Combs,
2. All judicial acts, the subject of review in this way. Parks v. Boston (ubi supra) State v. Marley, 8 Ire. 48; State v. Bill, 13 Ire. 373;Matthews v. Matthews, 4 Ire. 155.
3. A judicial act is one which involves the exercise of a discretion; and a ministerial act is one which does not. The grant of a license is the exercise of judicial power to determine, and adjudge the power of the court, and the merits of the application; wherein the court passes uponboth. The order *291 for license is reviewable ex debito justice, Fay and others, 15 Pick. 243;Regina v. Salford, 14 E.L. and E. 145. The writ of certiorari is ordinarily and commonly used in this State as a substitute for an appeal, when the latter has been lost without any default of the party entitled to it. Its effect in such a case is to give to the party a right to a trial de novo; or a re-hearing in the appellate court.
But though this is the ordinary and most common, it is not the only use of the writ. It may be, and often is, employed as a writ of false judgment, to correct errors in law, and then it is the means whereby the superior court, which is the highest court of original jurisdiction in this State, can, and in a proper case, always will, control inferior tribunals, in matters for which no writ of error lies, by bringing up their judicial proceedings to be reviewed in the matter of law. In such case, the certiorari is in effect a writ of error, as all that can be discussed and determined in the superior court, are the power and sufficiency of the proceedings as they appear upon the face of them. Matthews v. Matthews, 4 Ire. Rep. 155; Brooks v. Morgan, 5 Ire. 481; State v. Bill, 13 Ire. 373.
It appears then, that the proceedings of inferior tribunals which are subject to revision in a higher court, must be of a judicial nature; and it would seem must be such as are not merely discretionary. "For," say the court, in the case of the Attorney General v. the justices of Guilford, 5 Ire. 329, "it is the nature of a discretion in certain persons, that they are to judge for themselves, and therefore, no power can require them to decide in a particular way or review their decision by way of appeal, or by any proceeding in the nature of an appeal, since the judgment of the justices would not then be their own, but that of the court under whose mandate they give it."
This rule was applied in the case of Pratt v. Kittrell, 4 Dev. Rep. 168, where it was decided by the court that the *292 grant of a special administration pendente lite was discretionary in the county court, and that therefore its order, making such a grant, could not be revised in the superior court, either by appeal or upon a writcertiorari. These principles are decisive of the case which we have now under consideration.
The order of the county court in granting the defendant a license to retail spirituous liquors, was either an act merely ministerial, or, if judicial, discretionary in its character. If the former, as from the case of Regina v. the overseers of Salford, 14 Eng. Law and Eq. Rep. 145, it would appear to be, then the writ of certiorari would not lie, because the order was not of, "a judicial nature." If the latter, then the writ would not lie, because it would be contrary to a discretionary power to have it reviewed by way of appeal, "or by any proceeding in the nature of anappeal."
But it is said that the fifth section of the act of 1850, entitled, "An act, to amend an act, passed in the year 1803, entitled an act for the government of the city of Raleigh," takes from the justices of the county court of Wake, the discretionary power to grant a license to any person to retail spirituous liquors within the limits of the city, without the permission of the board of commissioners, and that therefore such grant is against law, and may be reviewed upon a writ of certiorari, used as a writ of error. A slight consideration will show the fallacy of this argument. The justices are not bound to grant license to every person who makes application for it. Should the board for commissioners of the city of Raleigh. They still have the right, and it is their duty to exercise a sound discretion in deciding upon the necessity of such grant, and the fitness of the person who makes application for it. Should the board, for the purpose of raising revenue for the city, give their permission to fifty or one hundred applicants, would the justices be bound to license them all? Would they not be guilty of a gross dereliction of public duty if they did? Surely then, their discretionary power is not taken away; and besides, when they make a grant, their records need not show any thing more than that the applicant had produced before them the *293 permission in writing of the board, and had in a proper manner proved his good moral character; so that in a case like the one now before us, the writ would be totally ineffectual, because the alleged error in law would not appear upon the record. This proves conclusively that it is not the proper remedy. What that remedy is, the act itself points out by declaring that the license shall be void, and the person acting under it shall be liable to a penalty as well as to an indictment.
In the case of Regina v. the overseers of Salford above referred to, which was a rule, calling upon the Board of Inland Revenue, to show cause why a license for the sale of beer, granted by a supervisor of excise to one Hague, in the borough of Salford, which had been brought up to the court of Queen's bench by certiorari, should not be quashed, on the ground that it had been granted without the production of the certificate of the overseer, as required by the statute of 3 and 4 Vict. ch. 61, sec. 2. The court held that the writ would not lie, intimating that the question might be raised by proceeding under the 13th section for the penalty therein prescribed.
Our conclusion then, is, that the plaintiffs have mistaken their remedy, and that there was no error in the order of the superior court by which their petition was dismissed. We have not thought it necessary to consider particularly whether the plaintiffs, who certainly were not parties to the record in the county court, had such an interest in the order granting a license to the defendant, as authorised them to have such order reviewed in the superior court upon an appeal, or upon any proceeding in the nature of an appeal. We mention the objection only to prevent the conclusion being drawn from our silence that we deemed it untenable.
PER CURIAM. The order of the superior court is affirmed.