4 Ky. 598 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1809
OPINION of the Court, by
The circuit court of Jefferson, at the November term in the year 1808, made the following entry : “ ordered, that Gabriel J. Johnston, Esq. be sent to jail for the space of six hours for a contempt of the court.” To this Johnston prosecutes this writ of error.
Although writs of error shall, upon the demand of the party applying, be issued as matters of right, and ex debito justifies ; yet when the case is brought subjudice, it should always be a preliminary consideration, whether the writ lies in that particular. Should a writ of error be sued to revise the acts of the executive department of the government, it would readilv be acknowledged to have issued improvidently. If it lies not to revise every procedure under the authority of the government, in what cases does it lie ? That this court can exercise of right, an appellate judicial jurisdiction only, except in some specified cases of original jurisdiction, is established by the constitution of our government. Yet neither there, nor in our statutes, are the various cases specified in which an appeal to this tribunal shall be an appropriate remedy for redress of grievances. From our statutes we may collect that every case to be revised by this court, must be arranged in one of two classes, decrees of the courts of chancery, or judgments of other courts; except where they hava otherwise specially provided. In process of time, the distinction between appeals as applicable to decrees, and writs of error as applicable to judgments, has worn away, and in our statutes and courts appeals and writs of error are indiscriminately applied to decrees and judgments, regarding, in the use of those terms, the time only at which the process of removal is prayed. With this explanation we would be understood, that in applying
The writ of error “ lyeth when a man is grieved by any error in the foundation, proceeding, judgment or execution, and thereupon it is called breve de errore cor-rigendo. But without a judgment, or an azvard in nature of a judgment, no writ of error doth lie ; for the words of the writ be si judicium redditum sit.” — -Co. Litt. fol. 288, b. That the judgment upon which th© writ of error lies, must be one which has been given in an action is maintained by high authority. Accordingly it is said, in'Co. Litt. fol. 289 a, “ the writ of error and the writ of attaint do ensue the nature of the former action.” Therefore to maintain a writ of error, there must have been an action, and a. judgment in that action. After having divided actions into criminal and civil, and subdivided the latter into real, personal and mixed, Coke gives us the definition of an action, in his commentary on Littleton, (fol. 285 a) “ and generally actio nihil aliud est, quam jus prosequendi in judicio, quod sibi debutur. Or, an action is nothing else than a demand at law of one’s right. Again he says, fob 289 a, that an action, real or personal, doth imply a recovery of something in the realty or personalty, or a restitution to the same.” Now, a mixed action can imply nothing less. In the same work, (fol. 39 a,) after giving the definition of judgment, “ quasi juris dictum, the very voice of law and right,” he says the ancient words of judgment are consideration est” Eye. (it is considered) “ because that judgment is ever given by the court upon due consideration had of the record before them: and in every judgment there ought to be three persons, actor, reus and judex.” We have said this much of the nature of actions and judgments, and the forms thereof, because, as is well said by Coke (on Litt. fol» 168 a,) they conduce much to the right understanding of the law and the reason thereof, especially in this particular case. The principles laid down by Cok© have been resorted to, and acknowledged in many adjudications, of which we will select the following, as
The material grounds of the decision are, that a writ of error is calculated to restore the party to somewhat that is lost; but the mandamus gives no right to the person in whose favor it was awarded, and the reversal would give no right to the plaintiff in error; that a writ of error only lies on what is properly a judgment, which that was not; that the award of a peremptory mandamus, or the allowance of a return to the alternative mandamus, is but an entry, not w ith the “ consideratum est lastly, the great inconveniences that would follow, if cases of mandamus should be hungup by writs of error.
The proceedings for contempts, are not in their nature actions. There is no actor, claiming a realty or personalty or the mixed, whose right or demand is to ba affirmed or concluded by the event. The person offending is not to be for ever concluded of any right. There is not the presence of the three persons constituting a judgment ; the award of punishment is made upon no consideration of a record before the court, it is but an order or rule upon the person; and the entry is without an “ ideo consideratum est.” Not, indeed, that the absence of that characteristic where it should be, or the presence of it where it should not be, can withhold or give the writ of error ; but that the court ought to look ipto the nature of the demand or proceedings, and thence determine the proper form of the entry. But what if
The cases of Clay and of Allen, formerly decided in this court, and cited by the counsel of Johnston, do not notice this preliminary question ; and it was then entirely overlooked, as we are informed by one of the judges who sat in those cases.
The inconveniences which might result from sustaining writs of error and appeals from orders for punishing contempts, are worthy of great consideration. We ought indeed to weigh well the consequences, before we give a deliberate sanction to a procedure never once recorded in the juridical annals, from the earliest periodf down to the present day, except in the two cases jusi
But-it may perhaps be asked, if each court is suffered to exercise the power of punishing contempts, without the control and revision of any other court, where is the
Government cannot be administered without committing powers in trust and confidence ; the exercise of power now complained of, is one which, it seems to, us, each court must necessarily exercise — free and independent of this court — subject, however, to that responsibility which we ourselves owe to the country. It is therefore considered by the court that the writ of error be quashed.