23 Or. 446 | Or. | 1893
1. The defendant was tried and fined in a justice’s court upon a complaint for trespass conceded to be fatally defective. A writ of review was sued out of the circuit court, which, upon motion, was dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The error alleged in this ruling is the ground of the appeal. The ruling was based on the assumption that there is no right to the writ to review the judgment of a justice’s court in a criminal action when the fine is less than twenty dollars, for the reason that the right to the writ is concurrent with the right of appeal. A correct determination of the question presented depends upon the construction to be given to section 585 of Hill’s Code, as amended by the act of 1889 (Laws 1889, 134). Prior to the amendment the writ
2. As an appeal could not be taken in a criminal action in a justice’s court where the fine is less than twenty dollars (section 2161, Hill’s Code), the trial court held, that as the fine was less than twenty dollars, the right to the writ was not authorized and could not be granted. Or, in other words, as the right of review and the right of appeal were concurrent remedies, and there being no right of appeal in the case because the fine was less than twenty dollars, there could be no x’ight of review. This result would undoubtedly be correct if the section as amended only made the right of review concurrent with the right of appeal; but it not only provides that the writ shall be concurrent with the right of appeal, but that it “shall be allowed in all cases” where the inferior tribunal acts without jurisdiction, or exercises its powers erroneously to the injury of the plaintiff. In the case at bar, it is conceded that the court acted without jurisdiction to the injury of the defendant, as no offense was charged against the defendant in the complaint, and consequently, while there was no right of appeal, there was an erroneous exercise of jurisdiction which entitled the plaintiff to the writ within the terms of the section.