Knight v. Zahnhiser

53 W. Va. 370 | W. Va. | 1903

BRAnnon, Judge:

John B. Knight sued Zahnhiser Bros. & Sten for debt, before D. C. Wellen, a justice of Braxton County, and the defendants being non-residents, an attachment was issued against their estate. Judgment was given 23rd September, 1898, by the justice for the plaintiff, and under an order of sale the at-laehed effects were sold. Before the sale Zalmhiser Bros. & Sten moved Justice Wellen to grant a new trial or rehearing, they not having appeared to the action, but the justice refused to do so, as shown by his docket. Later a peremptory mandamus was awarded by the circuit court of Braxton commanding Justice Wellen to rehear the action; but he entered no order touching it. The petition for prohibition says that he had removed from the county and vacated his office of justice before the motion for rehearing and before the institution of the proceeding in mandamus. -The matter lay asleep until 2d Uo-veinber, 1901, when Zahnhiser Bros. & Sten moved G. R. Gib*371son, successor of Wcllcn as justice to rebear the action. Thereupon, Knight applied to and obtained from Hon. W. G. Bennett, circuit judge, a rule against Justice Gibson and Zahnhiser Bros. & Stcn to prohibit rehearing the case before the justice. Upon return of the rule, the circuit court of Braxton, upon demurrer to Knight’s petition and upon a motion to discharge the rule, entered judgment discharging the rule and denying the prohibition, and Knight sued out a writ of error.

We need not discuss all the points gone over by counsel, 'because the solution of the case before us is governed by the points now to be stated, rendering it unnecessary and improper to pass on the points alluded to.

No exception to the jurisdiction of Justice Gibson was made to him before the application for the prohibition. In 16 Ency. Pl. & Prac. 1128 we hand this: “Applications.for the writ of prohibition are premature until exceptions has been taken to the jurisdiction of the lower courts and overruled, and will be refused, if this has not been done, for it is invariably presumed that, courts will give the parties the relief to which they show themselves entitled.” I grant that this is not jurisdictional; but it is, and ought to be, imperative practice. Why should not relief be first sought in the court alleged to have no jurisdiction, the proper place to present the question in the first instance? The case of Board of Education v. Hall, 51 W. Va. 435, proceeds on this rule. It is laid down by all the authorities except Com. 2 Latham 85 Va. 632. citing no authority.

Again, Justice Gibson had jurisdiction to decide for or against the appellant for rehearing. I have observed no point or matter presented in the briefs not proper for his consideration as entering into the question of granting a rehearing, and cognizable upon an appeál from his court to the circuit court, and ' therefore prohibition does not lie. When he decides, though he may decide erroneously, yet he decides within the scope of his jurisdiction and an appeal affords redress for any error. Johnson v. Hunter, 50 W. Va. 52.

We, therefore, affirm the judgment.

Affirmed.

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