191 Wis. 597 | Wis. | 1927
(1) Sec. 360.22 of the Statutes provides that when a person accused of a criminal offense is acquitted he shall immediately be discharged; “and if the court before whom the trial is had shall certify in his docket that the complaint was wilful and malicious and without probable cause it shall enter a judgment against the complainant to pay all the costs that shall have accrued to the court and sheriff or constable and jury, and the fees of witnesses in the proceedings had upon such complaint.”
When a justice of the peace pronounces judgment orally at the close of the trial he has a reasonable time in which to enter the judgment in his docket and to perfect the same by the taxation of costs, even under statutes which require that judgment be entered instantly. Kleinsteuber v. Schumacher, 35 Wis. 608, 613. But he has no power to enter any judgment except the one orally pronounced at the close of the trial. Here the justice attempted to enter a judgment different from the one pronounced at the close of the trial and at a time when he had no right to enter any judgment except the one pronounced at the trial. The judgment for costs against the respondent was therefore void and of no effect.
(2) The time for appeal having expired before the respondent knew of the existence of the judgment for costs against him, the respondent has no remedy outside of a court of equity. Certiorari afforded no adequate remedy because the docket of the justice appeared regular on its face. It was only when oral proof was offered that the fact appeared that the judgment for costs was void because entered without jurisdiction. “Equity suffers no wrong to go without a remedy, the wrong being of sufficient gravity to be appreciated by the conscience of the chancellor, and application being made to its jurisdiction seasonably and with clean hands.” Boring v. Ott, 138 Wis. 260, 271, 119 N. W. 865.
The fact that respondent would be compelled to pay a judgment entered without giving him his day in court and
It would be unconscionable to permit the appellants to enforce a void judgment entered without jurisdiction, but “the jurisdiction of equity is not exercised to disturb a judgment. That can only be done according to methods provided by the Code; But it acts directly upon the party who is in a position to and might, if not restrained of his liberty, enforce the judgment, tying his hands so as to prevent him from doing so, thus leaving the judgment good in form but valueless and harmless in fact.” Balch v. Beach, 119 Wis. 77, 85, 95 N. W. 132. The judgment of the circuit court went too far. The court had no power to vacate and set aside the judgment. The oply power possessed by the circuit court was to restrain the enforcement of the judgment. The judgment must therefore be modified so that it will not in form' vacate and set aside the judgment which is here in question.
(3) This being an action in equity, the allowance of costs in this action rests in the sound discretion of the court. The trial court imposed the costs of this action upon both the county, in whose favor the judgment for costs was entered in the criminal action, and upon the justice of the peace who entered the judgment. Nothing is more essential to the maintenance of our republican institutions than that those who occupy judicial positions, whether in courts of record or in those of limited jurisdiction, should at all times be free to follow the dictates of their own judgment in each case submitted to them for decision without being held personally liable to those who do not prevail in litigation conducted before them. “It requires no argument to show that the doctrine of judicial immunity is absolutely essential to the very existence of the judicial office. A magistrate could not be respected or independent if his motives for his official action, or his conclusions, could be put in question at the in
Apparently the justice acted under the mistaken belief- that the statute gave him the right, after1 the trial had closed, to make the finding that the complaint was malicious and without probable cause. The. complaint does not allege and the proof does not show that the justice acted wilfully, maliciously, or from any motive other than a good-faith belief that he had power to enter this judgment for costs. The justice had jurisdiction of the criminal action. The case is one where the justice acted under the mistaken belief that he had the power, after the case was closed and judgment pronounced, to enter judgment for costs against the complaining witness. Justices of the peace should be protected against liability for mere errors of judgment. But they should at the same time be held answerable for the commission of any wrong, even if under the guise of a judicial act, that is done wilfully and with knowledge that the justice is acting without jurisdiction. “Such protection is necessary to the independence and usefulness of the judicial officer, and such responsibility is important to guard the citizen against' official oppression.” Robertson v. Parker, 99 Wis. 652, 657, 75 N. W. 423.
While the decisions of other states have held the judges of inferior courts to a more strict accountability for judicial acts, Wisconsin has joined “in the increasing procession of states that have adopted and ate following the more humane and less stringent test of liability in cases of this kind,” where the acts of judges of inferior courts are questioned. Robertson v. Parker, 99 Wis. 652, 659, 75 N. W. 423. Under this more humane and less stringent rule there is no
By the Court. — The judgment appealed from is modified in accordance with this opinion, and as so modified is affirmed.