3 Mo. 339 | Mo. | 1834
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The County Court of Pike county had entered up a judgment against Matson as-, administrator, in favor of the distributees of Matson’s intestate, from which judgment
For the plaintiff in error it is contended that the Circuit Court having, by 8th section of the 5th article of the -Constitution, a superintending control over such inferior tribunals as the Legislature may establish,,and the County Court being an inferior jurisdiction so established; the Circuit Court has a right to-exercise that control by • writ of error, even though the statute should deny it the -use of such writ. And it is likened to the cases in which this Court took by aid of the writ of error, appellate jurisdiction over- cases decided in the Circuit Court, when the amount in. controversy was less than one hundred-dollars, although the statute had.limited its-, appellate jurisdiction to -that sum.. On the othter side it is contended that by the 2d , section of the 5th article of the Constitution, this Court having appellate jurisdiction. over the Circuit Court,.is therefore only authorized to use the writ of error when the statute denies it, and that the superintending control given to-it by the 3d section of.' the same article, is to be exercised only by writs of habeas corpus, &c., and to this • opinion a majority of this Court inclines. The 6th section of the act to establish Courts of Justice, &c., see .Laws Mo., p. 270, gives ..the Circuit Court its . appellate jurisdiction, and the 77th section of the act concerning executors and ad- • ministrators, directs how an appeal shall be taken. In all cases it must be done at the term where the decision is made, affidavit must be-made, &c., and then this • appeal, operates as a. supersedeas, in no other matter relating to the duties of executor or administrator, or. the administration of the estate, than that from which the appeal. is specially taken. In all sums over two hundred dollars, the County .Court and the Circuit Court have concurrent jurisdiction, and the plaintiff if he will sue in the Circuit Court, by the same 8th section giving the Circuit Court a superintending - control over the inferior tribunals to be established by the Legislature, a like control is given to that Court over the Justices of the Peace of its particular Circuit, and ' yet it never was pretended that a writ of error lay from the Circuit Court to the decisions of the Justices of the Peace. The Justice’s Court is certainly no Court.of record, and it may be said that the Legislature was under no obligation to make that inferior tribunal, called a County Court, a Court of Record; and had it not been a Court of Record, it is imagined that no one would have contended the writ of error would lie. What the law-maker could denyjby indirect means, it may equally deny in a direct manner. In all cases of the settlements of estates of deceased persons,
The case of Town and the Clerk of the Supreme Court has been relied on. Town is there said to have applied to the Clerk of the Supreme Court for a writ of error, to bring “ up a certain matter there decided and adjudged, wherein by law an appeal does not lie to the Circuit Court,” and the Clerk refusing to issue the writ, applieation was made to this Court to compel him.; but this Court refused, and intimated a belief that a writ of error would lie from the Circuit Court to the County Court. This is no more than a dictum of the Court, in.a case-too-whore no appeal lay. Here the appellant had neglected to avail himself of his right to appeal. The judgment of the Circuit Court is therefore affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I do not concur in this opinion. I am of opinion that a writ of error will well lie from the Circuit Court to the County Court. I am of opinion, however, that if it were adjudged to lie in this case, the party could get nothing by it. I understand on this last matter the Court all think alike..