58 Cal. 315 | Cal. | 1881
Lead Opinion
The City of Marysville, in the month of September, 1879, commenced- an action in the then District Court of Yuba County, over which the Hon. Philip W. Keyser presided, against the present petitioner and numerous other mining corporations and individuals-—-the complaint alleging, among other things, in substance, that the plaintiff is, and since the 3d day of February, 1851, has been, an incorporated city, embracing within its limits about three thousand acres of land, of which it owns and controls the city cemetery, containing about fifteen acres; the fair grounds, containing twenty-one acres; various public squares; two landing-places for steamers and barges; the city hall, jail, engine-house, and two brick schoolhouses, with the lots on which they stand; the streets and alleys, and, also, a levee, some seven miles long, which surrounds the business part of the city, but which excludes about five hundred acres of its lands; that the city is situated on a plain on the north bank of the Yuba Biver, at its junction with Feather Biver, at the head of navigation thereon, and at an altitude of seventy-two feet above the sea; that the Yuba Biver is a living stream, heading between the eastern and western summits of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, and passes through deep canons on a western course until it reaches the eastern margin of the Sacramento Valley, where it debouches into that valley at a place called Yuba Mills, and crosses it on the same course in a sub-valley and empties into the Feather Biver at Marysville; that said river, in crossing the Sacramento Valley, runs through strips of rich bottom land, ranging from a half mile to two miles in width, which was originally first-class agricultural land; that the natural banks of the river were originally high enough to protect this land as well as the City of Marysville from overflow at the highest stage of water, without the use of levees, and that its water was clear in summer and sufficiently pure at all seasons for domestic uses and for irrigation; that steamboats for years made them landing and received and discharged their passengers and cargoes in front of the city, from
The plaintiff's prayer is that defendants, and each of them, be perpetually enjoined from depositing tailings and debris from their respective mining claims in the channel of the Yuba River or its tributaries, or permitting the said tailings and debris to flow therein, or from otherwise polluting the water of the said river or its tributaries.
The petitioner here, and others of the defendants in that action, appeared therein and filed demurrers to the complaint, and also moved the Court for a change of the venue thereof, basing the motion on the ground, among others, that the presiding Judge was directly interested in the result of the action; and in support of the motion the defendants submitted affidavits, which set out substantially the same facts as are made the ground of the petition here.
When the Superior Courts came into existence by virtue of the provisions of the New Constitution, the cause was transferred from the .District Court in which it was commenced and was pending, to the Superior Court of Yuba County, over which Judge Keyser also presided, and still presides, as Superior Judge. On the 21st of May of the present year the motion for change of venue came on for hearing, and, after argument and consideration, was denied—the learned Judge being of the opinion that he was not disqualified from sitting in the cause. Whereupon, certain of the defendants, one of whom is the present petitioner, applied to this Court for a writ of prohibition to prevent Judge Keyser from acting in the cause, basing its claims to the writ upon the following averments, to wit: That the respondent is, and during the pendency of the aforesaid action has been, the owner of two certain lots of land situated in the town of Yuba City, in the
A demurrer having been interposed to the petition by the City of Marysville—the real party in interest—we must, for the purposes of our decision, accept as true the averments of fact contained in the petition.
It is an ancient maxim, and one founded in the most obvious principles of natural right, that no man ought to be a judge in his own cause. That principle finds expression in our statute in these words: “ No Justice, Judge, or Justice of the Peace shall sit or act in any action or proceeding: 1. To which he is a party, or in which he is interested.” * * * (§ 170, Code Civ. Proe.) This provision should not receive a technical or strict construction, but rather one that is broad and liberal. “ The Court ought not to be astute to discover,” said the Supreme Court of Michigan, in Stockwell v. The Township Board of White Lake, 22 Mich. 350, “ refined and subtle distinctions to save a case from the operation of the maxim, when the principle it embodies bespeaks the propriety of its application. The immediate rights of litigants are not the only objects of the rule. A sound public policy, which is interested in preserving every tribunal appointed by law
If the relief prayed for is awarded, the same judgment that stops the flow of tailings or debris on to the lands of the City of Marysville, stops its flow on to the lands of the respondent. The very judgment that will protect Marysville will protect him. His interest, therefore, is not merely in the questions of law involved in the controversy, nor is it uncertain or remote; but it is a direct and immediate interest in the result of the action. We are, therefore, of the opinion that respondent is disqualified to sit in judgment in the cause.
Two objections are made to the remedy sought: The first is that the writ can not go to the respondent as Judge of the Superior Court; the second, that the petitioner has a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal.
The Code of Procedure provides: Ҥ 1102. The writ of
“ § 1103. It may be issued by any Court except Police or Justices’ Courts, to an inferior tribunal, or to a corporation, board, or person, in all cases where there is not a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law. It is issued upon affidavit, on the application of the party beneficially interested.”
In support of the first objection made, it is said that the person mentioned in the statute is not one who constitutes, or is a member of, a Court or tribunal, but is a person who otherwise exercises judicial functions. We do not think the language employed admits of that limitation; nor, in our opinion, does the reason for the writ suggest such distinction. The Judge who is authorized to hold a Court is not the Court, as is justly observed by the learned counsel. The Court over which the Judge presides may have jurisdiction of the cause, and yet the Judge himself be disqualified from sitting or acting in it by reason of interest, as is the case here. We are unable to see why such Judge is not a “ person” within the letter and spirit of the statute against whom the writ may go in a proper case. “ There must in all cases be some Court or person,” says High on Ex. Legal Remedies, § 775, "to whom the writ may be addressed and against whom it may be enforced.” Where two Justices of the Peace were proceeding without authority of law to abate a supposed nuisance, prohibition was held the appropriate remedy to stay their action in South Carolina R. Co. v. Ells, 40 Ga. 87. (See also, Ex parte Greene et al., 29 Ala. 52; Hutson v. Lowry, 2 Va. Cases, 42.)
The other objection urged to the issuance of the writ is, that the petitioner may have the action of the Judge of the Court below reviewed on appeal. Unlike certiorari, the statute does not make the existence of a right of appeal an answer to an application for a writ of prohibition or of mandamus. Each of these writs may be issued, under the provisions of the statute, where there is not a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law—a remedy competent
It is hardly necessary to say that the merits of the controversy between the City of Marysville and the miners are in no wise involved in the present proceedings.
Let the demurrer to the petition be overruled, with leave to the respondent to answer within ten days from the entry of this order.
Morrison, C. J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I think, upon the facts alleged in the petition, and not denied by the respondent, that he is shown to be interested in the action which the petitioner seeks to have him prohibited from sitting or acting in. If so, the code declares that he shall not sit or act in it. The petition shows that he owns land which must necessarily be damaged by the mining operations of the defendant complained of in said action, if the land of plaintiff therein is damaged by said mining operations. The rights of plaintiff, for which it asks protection, pertain equally to the respondent. The grievance of which the plaintiff complains is one of which the respondent might complain upon the same grounds. If the plaintiff can maintain the action now pending in the Superior Court, of which
The more embarrassing question is whether the petition presents a case in which it is proper to grant a writ of prohibition to prevent the respondent from sitting or acting in said action. That writ is defined by the code to be “ the counterpart of the writ of mandate. It arrests the proceedings of any tribunal, corporation, board, or person, when such proceedings are without or in excess of the jurisdiction of such tribunal, corporation, board, or person.”
The action is one of which the Superior Court, of which the respondent is Judge, has jurisdiction, and it is not alleged that jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants has not beeen duly acquired. It is, therefore, not a case in which any tribunal is acting or proceeding without jurisdiction or in excess thereof. And it may be, although the decisions are conflicting upon the question, that the judgment, if one should be entered in the action, would not be void by reason of the disqualification of the Judge to sit in it. All agree that it would be voidable at least. But if the Judge is interested in the action he has no right to sit or act in it. No more right than he would have to sit or act in an action pending in the Superior 'Court of a county other than the one of which he is elected Judge, without being requested by the Judge of that Court, or by the Governor so to do. His sitting or acting in an action in which the law declares he shall not sit or act, would seem to be without jurisdiction. Jurisdiction is: “ The authority by which judicial officers take cognizance of and decide causes. Power to hear and determine causes.” (Bouvier, Tit. “ Jurisdiction.”) Now a Judge who is interested in in an action, not only has no authority to hear and determine it, but he is expressly prohibited from doing so. I am aware of the rule by which this Court is precluded from determining the title of a Judge to his office, upon an application of this nature. While in the actual possession of the office of Judge of a court the judgments and orders of a Judge de facto, are not void, nor even voidable, on the sole ground of
It is suggested, however, that the petitioner has a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law by appeal from the order denying that motion. The Code gives it that remedy, but is it speedy and adequate ? An appeal from that order would not stay proceedings, and the action might be tried before the appeal could be perfected. Therefore the remedy by appeal is not adequate. A party has a right to have his case heard and determined by a Judge who is not disqualified by interest from hearing and determining it. And if an interested Judge can not be prevented from hearing and determining an action in which he is interested by any other remedy than that which is here sought, then there is no other adequate remedy for that wrong. The proceedings can not be arrested in any other way, and the petitioner has a right to have them arrested, if they are without or in excess of the jurisdiction of the respondent.
An adequate remedy in a case like this would have to be one by which the proceedings of the respondent would be arrested. I know of no other than the remedy prayed, by which that object could be accomplished. Therefore, I concur in the order overruling the demurrer.
I concur in the order overruling the demurrer, for the reasons stated by Mr. Justice Ross; but I wish to be distinctly understood as not expressing, directly or indirectly, the view that this will affect the injunction issued by the Court below or the order granting the .same. My concurrence is to the
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent from the conclusion reached by the majority. The Court having jurisdiction, the writ of prohibition is not the proper remedy. I do not think the writ of prohibition runs to a judicial officer to prevent him from proceeding to hear and decide a cause, when the jurisdiction belongs not to him as a person, but to the Court of which he is a constituent part.
I agree in the opinion of the majority that Judge Keyser is disqualified.
McKee, J., concurred in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Thornton.