38 Colo. 243 | Colo. | 1906
Lead Opinion
delivered tbe opinion of tbe' court:
B. Harcourt, Esq., one of tbe justices of tbe peace of Morgan county, on March 28,1903, rendered judgment against tbe defendant in tbe suit of J. E. Jewel against W. M. Bruce, and against Tbe State Bank of Fort Morgan as garnishee. On April 8,1903, this suit was begun by Tbe State Bank of Fort Morgan filing in tbe county court of Morgan county a petition for writ of certiorari. Tbe writ was granted, and tbe justice certified to tbe county court, as required by law, the transcript and papers in the case Jexoel v. Bruce. Tbe court dismissed tbe cause, and
It is contended here that the petition filed in the county court was not sufficient in law to authorize the issuance of the writ, and we shall first determine that question. The petition statfes, among other things, that the hank, on the 19th of February, was served with -a writ of attachment and notice of garnishment in the suit of Jewel v. Bruce, requiring the bank to- make answer to the' interrogatories attached to the notice, on or before the 16th day of March, 1903; that on the 16th day of March the bank, through its president, answered the interrogatories so served upon it, stating in the answer's that it had not in its possession or under its control property or effects belonging to Bruce or in which he was interested; that it did not know of any debts due or owing said Bruce, or of any property or effects of said Bruce, and that it was not indebted to said Bruce in money or property; that the said answer was made before Hareourt, the justice of the peace, and filed in his office; that afterwards and on March 26th, Jewel, the plaintiff in the case, appeared at the bank and stated that he was desirous of having further testimony in relation to the garnishment proceedings, and that the bank, through its president, made answer to further interrogatories touching liability on the part of the bank to the defendant in said action, in which answers the bank in substance denied any such liability ; that neither the bank nor its officers or attorney knew that the judgment had been rendered until after the time for taking an appeal had expired. The petition further states that the bank “is not indebted to said Bruce, nor has it been indebted to him or had in its possession or control, since the 19th of February, 1903, or at any time before or since that time, any personal property, goods, chattels, effects, dioses
The writ of certiorari mentioned in the chapter ‘ ‘ Concerning Justices and Constables” is a substitute for appeal, and is intended to grant an appeal in unusual cases where the party, without negligence on his part, has been prevented from taking an appeal in the ordinary way. Section 2695, Mills’ Ann. Stats., provides that the petition shall show that the judgment was not the result of negligence of the petitioner; that it is, in his opinion, erroneous and unjust, and that it was not in the power of the party to take an appeal in the ordinary way; and the statute requires that the petition shall set forth the particular circumstances which prevented him from so doing.
We are of opinion that the petition is sufficient. It shows that the judgment is unjust and erroneous, and it shows that the party has not been negligent and that he could not take an appeal in the ordinary way. Section 2728 provides that: “After the answer of the garnishee, in any case, is made, either before the officer or in court, the plaintiff, his agent or attorney, may controvert the whole or any part of said answer by filing in court, or before the justice, an affidavit traversing any of the facts set forth in such answer (such affidavit may be upon information and belief); thereupon a scire facias shall- issue and be served upon such garnishee (unless he be already in court) requiring him to appear before the court or justice upon a day named therein; ’ ’ aiid it is claimed by counsel that the words in parenthe
After the cause is certified by the justice, and the petition finally disposed of, the writ becomes functus officio. The parties are then to try the issue raised in the justice’s court before the comity court. The statute does not provide, for notice to the non-appealing party, and, unless the parties voluntarily appear or have been served with notice, the court cannot proceed with the trial de novo. Neither the plaintiff nor the defendant before the justice was made, a party in the county court, hut the court proceeded to a review of the judgment of the justice, and sustained his judgment, and directed a procedendo to issue, in a suit entitled “The State Bank
We do not think'it important that the petition itself does not name the non-appealing parties. When the writ is issued, the cause is certified to the county court; the original cause is then to be tried, and the title of the cause should correspond to the title in the justice’s court. When the case was brought to this court, the plaintiff in error made the plaintiff in the justice’s court a party, and the scire facias was issued against him, as well as against the justice of the peace. The plaintiff in the suit below has filed his motion to strike his name from the scire facias, and we think this should be granted. He was not a party to the suit in the county court, and, when the justice of the peace moved in the county court that he be made a party, the motion was overruled, presumably because the motion was resisted by the garnishee, the plaintiff in error here. The proper practice requires that, in petitions for writs of this character, although the judge is the person upon whom service has been made, he, being a mere nominal party, should not be required to litigate or to be made a party defendant. When he is served with such writ, he should notify the parties in interest,» and they should relieve him of the burden of the litigation; and, while it is not important that the parties in the court below were not made parties in the petition for certiorari, still the proper practice would seem to be that they should be made parties, and that the writ be directed to the justice of the peace.
The county court overruled a motion to quash the writ, but “upon the same day,” so the order recites, upon a review of the proceedings before the justice, held that the justice had jurisdiction of the cause,
Reversed.
Chief Justice Gabbert and Mr. Justice Campbell concur.
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
Department 3. — On rehearing, it is ordered that the defendants in error recover of and from the plaintiff in error their costs in this behalf expended, and that execution issue therefor.