3 Or. 484 | Or. | 1869
l'n dismissing the writ below, that court seems to have decided these propositions, that appeal and
By section 572, p. 294, of the Code, the writ, heretofore known as the writ of certiorari, is known in this code as the writ of review, and the next section declares “that any party to any process or proceeding before or by any inferior court, etc., may have the decision or determination thereof, reviewed for errors therein.” This is substantially the law as it was in 1860. At the December Term, 1860, of the supreme court of this state, the same question was before that court, as is now here. In Blanchard et al. v. Bennett et al., 1 Oregon, 329, the court held, “a certiorari may have been a proper remedy, and so may have been an appeal; the statute regulating appeals from justices of the peace allows appeals in all cases, etc., (Laws of Oregon, 1854; p. 295, sec. 185.) I therefore conclude that appeals lie in all cases from the final decisions of justices of the peace, and the remedy by certiorari is concurrent.” When the writ of review was substituted for that of certiorari, it was subject to the same construction and application. The only difference in the law is found in sec. 575 of the Code, which was not distinctly found in the law of 1854. That declares that the writ of review “shall be allowed, in all cases where there is no appeal, or other plain, speedy, and adequate remedy, and where the inferior court officer appears to have exercised such functions erroneously, etc.”
When a party complains only of the errors in law appearing upon the record and proceedings, it is certainly not a. plain, speedy or adequate remedy to force him to rely upon an appeal, which, under sec. 536, subdiv. 3, p. 285, of the Code, requires the same proceedings as though the case had been commenced in the circuit court, involving witnesses and a multitude of costs and disbursements, instead of having the pure questions of law, governing the case, heard and decided with comparatively no trouble or cost.