223 N.W. 445 | Iowa | 1928
The plaintiff was charged by information before the defendant, mayor of the city of Newton, with the crime of assault and battery, not in violation of a city ordinance, but in violation of the state law. The plaintiff was arrested, and brought before the mayor, and to the information entered a plea of not guilty. Before any testimony was taken, the plaintiff, in strict conformity with Section 13569 of the Code of 1927, filed a motion for change of venue, supported by affidavit, stating that he could not obtain justice before said mayor, which motion was overruled; and, over plaintiff's objection, the mayor proceeded with the trial, which, on July 28, 1927, resulted in a finding of guilty, as charged in the information, and a judgment against the defendant of a fine and the costs.
The plaintiff, on the 15th day of the following August, commenced this action in certiorari in the district court, to review the action of the defendant mayor in overruling his motion for change of venue. The defendant made due return to the writ, and filed a motion to quash or annul the writ, upon the grounds that the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief demanded, and that he had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal, which motion was by the court sustained, and the plaintiff's action was dismissed, and judgment was rendered against the plaintiff for costs. From this action by the district court, the plaintiff has appealed.
It is not, and could not, be claimed that the mayor did not have jurisdiction to try the defendant for the crime of assault and battery in violation of the state law. See Section 5732 of the Code. The proceedings before a mayor, with reference to a *205
criminal case brought under the state law, shall be in accordance with the law regulating similar proceedings before a justice of the peace. See Section 5735 of the Code. That the statutory law with reference to change of venue from one justice to another is applicable when the action is brought before a mayor, see Finchv. Marvin,
The mayor certainly had jurisdiction to determine the question raised by appellant's motion for change of venue. While the action of the mayor in overruling said motion was erroneous, did said erroneous action constitute an illegality within the meaning of Section 12456 of the Code? In Tiedt v. Carstensen,
"In a word, if a tribunal, when determining matters before it which are within its jurisdiction, proceeds in a manner contrary to law, it acts illegally. But if a discretion is conferred upon the inferior tribunal, its exercise cannot be illegal."
In the instant case, no discretion was vested in the mayor; for, the appellant having complied with the statutory law, it was then that officer's mandatory duty, within the provisions of said law, to grant the change of venue. In Timonds v. Hunter,
"The line of demarcation between a merely erroneous conclusion and an illegality for which no other adequate remedy is provided cannot be very exactly defined. * * * It is generally true that illegality or excess of jurisdiction, if any, is necessarily preceded by an erroneous conclusion. If the erroneous conclusion results in an illegality, within the meaning of Section 4154 [now Section 12456], then there is an illegality, and not merely an erroneous conclusion. The right to a jury trial in this case was an explicit statutory right. The defendant was deprived of it as effectively as if the refusal had been arbitrary."
Likewise, in the instant case, the appellant was entitled to a change of venue, and was deprived of it as effectively as if the refusal had been arbitrary.
The appellant relies on Chicago, B. Q.R. Co. v. Castle,
The party litigant who has been erroneously refused a change of venue cannot appeal from the action of the court in refusing the change, but must suffer judgment to be entered against him, and then appeal from the final judgment. Timonds *207 v. Hunter, supra; Atchison, T. S.F.R. Co. v. Mershon, supra;State ex rel. Erdahl v. District Court, supra.
The appellee relies on Ransom v. Cummins,
Since we hold that the action of the mayor in overruling *208 the motion for change of venue constituted an illegality within the meaning of Section 12456 of the Code, and that an appeal from the final judgment does not constitute a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy for said illegality, and that the plaintiff is entitled to relief by way of certiorari, the action of the trial court in annulling the writ and dismissing plaintiff's action and rendering judgment against him for the costs is hereby reversed. — Reversed.
All the justices concur.