197 P. 728 | Utah | 1921
From the proceedings had in the district court as certified to this court, after reciting the matters of inducement, the following appears:
“Tliereupon the court heard the evidence on behalf of the appli*102 cants, over the objection of counsel for the defendant, and the cause being submitted to the court for its decision and by the court taken under advisement, comes now the court, and, bein'g sufficiently advised, finds from the evidence aforesaid, after an inspection of the record and proceedings in said case before said justice court, that said court did not have jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants in said action and did not regularly pursue its authority as prescribed by law in the rendering of said judgment.
“Wherefore, it is ordered and adjudged that the judgment of the justice’s court aforesaid be, and the same is hereby, vacated and annulled.’’
Tbe appellants insist tbat the district court erred in admitting evidence other than what appeared from the transcript of the proceedings had before the justice’s court as the same were certified by said court.
The courts are entirely unanimous in holding that in cer-tiorari proceedings the record certified up by the court, board of tribunal to whom it is directed imports absolute
“A common-law writ of certiorari calls for the record of the proceedings challenged. If the return does not state the whole record, the proper course is to obtain an amended return, not to impeach it by affidavit or other proof. * * * The return to the writ is a response to its commands and not an answer to the allegations of the petition; and where addressed to an officer having custody of the official record, he must respond by the production of that record and nothing more. By that only is the proceeding to be tested. * * * The return to the writ imports absolute verity. Extrinsic evidence will not be received to support or overthrow it.”
This court has frequently so held. Beck v. Lewis, 49 Utah, 368, 164 Pac. 480; McMillan v. Durand, 38 Utah, 274, 112 Pac. 807; Griffiths v. District Court, 35 Utah, 445, 100 Pac. 1064; Quealy v. Sullivan, 42 Utah, 565, 132 Pac. 4; State v. District Court, 36 Utah, 267, 103 Pac. 261. In the case last cited it is pointed out how a record may be corrected if incorrectly certified up. The correction must be made by requiring the court or officer to whom the writ is directed to correct the same, and not by the production of extraneous
It is not necessary to strain the jurisdiction conferred in certiorari proceedings in order to obtain relief, if, indeed, the justice’s court was without jurisdiction. The law is well settled that in case a court has proceeded to enter judgment without jurisdiction, and the want thereof or its wrongful exercise does not appear upon the face of the proceedings as certified up, and thus cannot be reached
While in this ease the!record of the proceedings had before the justice’s court, as certified up, is brief and lacking in detail, yet the record was sufficient to show jurisdiction. Sullivan v. Miles, 117 Wis. 576, 94 N. W. 298; Moren v. American, etc., Co., 44 W. Va. 42, 28 S. E. 728. Indeed, counsel for respondents does not seriously contend that such is not the case but what he insists upon is that the district court had the power to hear extrinsic evidence to contradict or explain the record as certified up, and that upon a consideration of such evidence, in connection with the record, said court was justified in finding and holding that the justice who entered the judgment was without jurisdiction. That, as we have shown, the district court was powerless to do. Unless the record shows a lack of jurisdiction of the justice’s court, -or that he acted in excess thereof, the court was powerless to grant relief in this proceeding. It is far better, in the long run, to uphold the records of our justice’s courts, although such records may be brief and may be lacking in detail, when the jurisdictional facts sufficiently appear therein, than it would be to unduly interfere with the judgments and proceedings of such courts. As we have pointed out, there are ample remedies provided for wrongs that may occur in such courts without unsettling the faith and credit
Nor is the fact that the judgment reads “defendant,” that is, that it is singular and not plural in form, fatal to the judgment in this proceeding. Manifestly that irregularity is not a matter of jurisdiction, and hence does not make the judgment void. Lang v. Lang (S. D.) 173
It follows that the judgment of the district court should be, and it accordingly is, reversed, and the proceeding is dismissed at respondent’s costs.