Glennon v. Burton

144 Ill. 551 | Ill. | 1893

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cook county, quashing, on certiorari, the record of a justice of the peace of that county in a case wherein the People, etc., are plaintiffs, and No. 75 Custom House Place is defendant. The transcript of the record, certified as a return to the writ, shows that no final judgment had’been given in the case when the writ was sued out, and that the case was still pending before the justice of the peace for final decision when the Circuit Court gave judgment quashing the record.

The transcript recites, in that respect, as follows: “ Court adjudged the property seized on search warrant to be gambling implements and devices. Case continued to December 18, 1892.” Manifestly, no final process of any kind can issue on this order. No judicial effect legally follows from the simple finding of fact that the property seized is “gambling implements and devices.” It may be that when final judgment shall be given, the justice will adjudge that the property seized be released. Certainly, nothing in this transcript precludes, or is inconsistent, with the giving of such judgment. We can not assume, in advance of its action, that a tribunal will exercise a power with which it is not lawfully invested. Nor can certiorari be made to operate as an injunction, and restrain a tribunal from acting beyond its jurisdiction, however well grounded may be apprehensions in that respect. The office of the writ is only to bring before the court issuing it the record of the inferior tribunal for review. And it is elementary that the party suing out the writ shall have no other mode of review. People v. Wilkinson, 13 Ill. 660. Here, however, for aught that we can discover, the party sidng out the writ has a complete mode of review, in that he may have the justice before whom the proceeding is pending decide that the property seized be released. It is, undoubtedly, competent for the justice to decide that he has no jurisdiction in the case, or that, for other reasons, the property seized shall not be destroyed; and if he shall decide, in this respect, correctly, there can be no reason for resorting to gertiorari. It is nowhere asserted to be the law that certiorari will lie merely because proceedings have been begun before a tribunal that has no jurisdiction of them, when the tribunal has not taken final action upon them, and has made no order which must, of itself, injuriously affect the party suing out the writ, unless it shall be annulled by a court of review. This writ was prematurely sued out. Gerdes v. Champion, 108 Ill. 137; Lynde v. Noble, 20 Johns. 80; Haines v. Backus, 4 Wend. 219.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause is remanded to that court, with directions to enter an order dismissing the writ.

Judgment reversed.