34 Fla. 389 | Fla. | 1894
On the petition of the Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Company, filed in this court in May, 1890, a writ of certiorari was issued to the Circuit Court for the Fifth Judicial Circuit for Putman county, commanding the clerk of that court to transmit to this court a true copy of the record in the case wherein the said company was appellant, and Antone Boy was appellee, and in which judgment was rendered affirming the judgment of the court of the county judge of the said county of Putnam. From the record filed as a return to the writ by the clerk of the Circuit Court it is made to appear that a suit was instituted by the respondent Boy before the county judge of Putnam county against the Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Company to recover one hundred dollars, the value of a cow of respondent alleged to have been negligently killed by the company.
The declaration filed in the case alleged the value of the cow to be one hundred dollars, and that plaintiff’s claim for recovery arose under Chapter 3742, laws of 1887. A trial of the case in the court of the county
It is contended for petitioner that the county judge proceeded illegally in allowing attorney fees, and also exceeded his jurisdiction in entering judgment for more than one hundred dollars; and further that the action of the Circuit Court in affirming the judgment of the county judge was illegal and beyond its jurisdictional powers. Our decision under the present writ must affect the proceedings before the Circuit Court, as the writ was directed to that court, and not to the county judge. But as the proceedings in the Circuit Court were on appeal from proceedings before the county judge, the transcript' of the record of such proceedings filed in the Circuit Court must be examined in order to determine the legality of the action of the latter court therein. The power of this court to review and quash, on the common law writ of certiorari, the proceedings of an inferior tribunal when it proceeds in a cause without jurisdiction, or when its procedure is illegal, or is unknown to the law, or is essentially irregular, is, we think, clear; but while such power does exist, it must be remembered that its exercise is not a matter of right, but rests in the sound legal discretion of the court, and when the writ is .granted it will not serve the purpose of a writ of error or appeal with a bill of exceptions. Basnett vs. City of Jacksonville, 18 Fla., 523; Edgerton vs. Green Cove Springs, Ibid, 528. Whenever an appeal lies from the proceedings sought to be reviewed the general rule is to deny the writ of certiorari. The doctrine is generally stated that the functions of the writ of certiorari
The presentation of the case here has relation to the authority of the county judge to allow attorney fees under the statute, and his jurisdictional power to render a judgment for more than one hundred dollars, and also the power and authority of the Circuit Judge to affirm on appeal such a judgment. The failure to find in the record the judgment complained of makes it unnecessary for us to say anything in reference to the power and jurisdiction of the county judge in the premises. The declaration filed in the case before him claimed one hundred dollars damages, and until a final judgment was rendered there was nothing for the Circuit Court to review on appeal. In the absence of such judgment it is unnecessary to determine the power of the Circuit Court to affirm or reverse it on appeal. Without a final judgment in the court of the county judge, we are at a loss to understand how there can be any regular or legal affirmance in the appellate Circuit •Court of a j udgment not shown to exist, and as we find such a condition in the record, we must deal with it as we find it. The judgment of affirmance in the record before the Circuit Court was such an essential irregularity and departure from prescribed rules of procedure in such cases as to require that it be quashed, and a judgment will therefore be entered accordingly.