47 Miss. 200 | Miss. | 1872
An application has been made to us, for a rule against the judge of the circuit court of Warren county, and Cramer, Hume & McCown, plaintiffs in the suit, to show cause why a prohibition should not issue, against the further entertaining of the suit.
Prohibition is a common law writ issuable in England out of the superior courts of Westminster Hall, directed to the judge, and parties of a suit in any inferior court, commanding them to cease from the prosecution thereof, upon a suggestion that the cause originally does not belong to that jurisdiction, or some collateral matter arising therein; but to some other cognizance. The courts of the counties Palatine, county courts, courts baron, court of admiralty, ecclesiastical court, are of the class of inferior courts amenable to this writ. 3 Black. Comm. 112; 8 Bacon Abr. title Prohibition. The nature of the writ, and the grounds upon which it may be granted, are luminously stated by Lord
Lord Bacon, with Blackstone, Coke, and other accredited text writers, refers the right to issue the writ, to the “superintendency” of the courts of Westminster over all inferior courts, in order to prevent “innovation,” an usurpation of power, not given them, or an excess of power, in reference to some collateral matter arising in the suit; the object being two-fold, — first, to hold the inferior courts within the limits prescribed to them; and, secondly, to conserve a uniform rule, in all the courts, according to the common law, when the right involved is determinable by that law.
Anciently the writ of prohibition was an original writ, and like other original writs, could only issue out of chancery. The common law courts did not interpose, until the party to whom it was directed was in contempt for proceeding after he was served with the original. In later times that practice has become obsolete, and the application is now in the first instance made in the common law courts, stating the proceedings in the inferior court, and concluding with a prayer for the writ. Williams’ notes to Croucher v. Collins, 1 Saund. 136.
Being a common law writ, it has been accepted in the United States as part of the system, and employed in
Many cases hold the doctrine, that the reason upon which the writ is grounded, is necessity. A fundamental rule of the common law was, that there was no wrong without a remedy, and where there was no other redress for an excess of jurisdiction, this mode of remedy was allowed of necessity. The case of State v. Rigdell, 2
It may be said that it were unfortunate if indeed the circuit court of Warren county has no jurisdiction to try
Has the supreme court the jurisdiction to award the writ in this case, or any other, to the circuit court ? It is very clearly deducible from the history and nature of the writ, that it is an original proceeding, pertaining to a superior court of common law jurisdiction, by reason of having a supervision over courts of more limited- and inferior cognizance. The accurate text writers give a detail of the mode of remedy — there may be a declaration, grounded in part on a fiction, there may be pleas and issues of law and fact, and appropriate judgment. In the case cited from 4 Bilb, the court held that the order for the writ was the inception of the suit, from which a writ of error would not lie. It did not emanate from the king’s bench, common pleas, or exchequer, because of any appellate or revisory jurisdiction, but by-reason of their being superior courts, of original jurisdiction. The text writers, Blackstone, Bacon, and Comyn, say that it may issue out of the court of chancery, because that court was the depository of all original writs, but it was returnable into the king’s bench for further action.
By the constitution, the judicial power is vested in a supreme court, and such other courts of law and equity as are provided for in that instrument. Sec. 4, art. 6. “ The supreme court shall have no jurisdiction, but such as properly belongs to the supreme court. Sec. 14, same art. “ The circuit court shall have ‘ original ’ jurisdiction in all matters, civil and criminal, but in civil cases only where the amount in controversy shall exceed $150.” The 24th section confers on the legislature power to establish such other inferior courts as may be necessary, and to abolish the same at pleasure.
Sec. 409, code 1871, enacts, in the words of the constitution defining the jurisdiction of the supreme court,
Motion overruled.