75 So. 327 | Ala. | 1917
The writ of prohibition is the appropriate remedy where the object of its restraint is without jurisdiction to exercise the judicial power over the subject-matter or the parties, and there is no other adequate remedy. Ex parte State, etc.,
When the Supreme Court of this state is not in actual session, a justice thereof may entertain a petition for the supervisory writ of prohibition (Const. 1901, § 140); may, if he so concludes upon its consideration, issue an order to the officer or tribunal, the jurisdiction of which is thereby questioned, to make answer to the petition and a return thereof to the court by a day fixed; and restrain the officer or tribunal from effecting the power or authority sought to be exercised pending final determination by the Supreme Court of the inquiry thus instituted. It is the duty of those affected or governed by such order to observe it in all respects. This authority and practice has been often exerted by a justice when the court was not in actual session. It was availed of in Ex parte State, etc., supra, and reference to it may be found in the opening sentences of the opinion. There is a continuous period of approximately 6 weeks in February and March of each year, and a continuous period of approximately 90 days in July, August, and September of each year, when the court is not in actual session, the latter period being between terms, though the justices are generally at their duties at their chambers. If there was no power otherwise than in the court itself to maintain the status quo pending final determination by the court of the *16 right of the writ sought, it is manifest that the supervisory power (Const. § 140) residing in the court would be at times wholly unavailable, unless the court should remain in actual or repeatedly convene in special session; whereas, the statutes governing the sessions of this court fix terms therefor and interims between terms thereof. The established practice and recognized authority in such circumstances were properly observed and exercised in this instance, this court not being in session when the justice made his order on July 18, 1916. The report of the appeal will reproduce the order made on July 18, 1916.
L. W. Scoville filed an original bill in the Birmingham city court against the sheriff of Jefferson county, T. J. Batson, praying the issuance of "an order restraining and enjoining the said respondent as sheriff, * * * and his deputies and all other persons having the right to make arrests or institute prosecutions, from arresting this complainant, his agents, servants, and employés, for selling or keeping said Ambrosia, or from seizing the same, or in any other manner interfering with his rights of property therein, until a hearing of this cause, and that upon a final hearing of this cause that your honors will make such injunction or restraining order perpetual," and for general relief. The injunction was issued as prayed. The petition for the writ of prohibition, presented by the state, on the relation of its Attorney General, seeks to annul the injunction thus issued by the judges of the city court on the averred ground that, since neither the judges nor the city court had any jurisdiction to order issued or to issue restraining process against the sheriff and others in such circumstances, the injunction issued and ordered issued was null and void. The fundamental theory of the original bill is that the beverage, Ambrosia, is not a beverage within the penal prohibitory laws of this state, enacted to suppress the evils of intemperance and to promote temperance in Alabama.
While the original bill probably does not certainly exclude the beverage in question from every possible character of beverage upon which the statutes of this state visit their prohibitory effect, yet the inquiry presented by this petition of the state cannot be resolved by recourse to rules pertinent to and controlling upon a hearing on demurrer. Ala. Int. Power Co. v. Mt. Vernon, etc., Co.,
The original bill's theory and purpose was to restrain the diligence and activity of the sheriff and his deputies in Jefferson county in respect of the enforcement of the state's penal and related laws expressing the state's authority and power to promote temperance and to suppress the evils of intemperance. The case made by the original bill falls squarely within the principle and doctrine of the following of our decisions: Brown v. Birmingham, etc.,
The Attorney General is the principal law officer of the state. 4 Cyc. p. 1028. See, also, Gen. Acts 1915, p. 719. The state, with the Attorney General as relator, may invoke the supervisory powers of the Supreme Court (Const. § 140) over inferior jurisdictions, to the end that the judicial agencies of the state may be confined to the exercise of only the authority and powers committed to them.
Where the Supreme Court's supervisory power is invoked to annul the wholly void act of a judicial officer or tribunal, as in this instance, it is not essential that the officer or tribunal should be first moved to *17 avoid the subject of complaint set forth in the petition for the writ of prohibition.
A wholly void judicial act, resulting from the entire absence of jurisdiction in the premises, will not support an appeal. Singo v. McGhee,
The writ of prohibition is awarded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur.