65 Tenn. 3 | Tenn. | 1873
delivered tbe opinion of the court.
A state of facts is presented * in the record which though they might appeal very powerfully for relief to a court of equity in an appropriate form of proceed
The facts necessary to be considered are, that the relator appeared in the Circuit Court of Knox County on the 22d of February, 1873, and moved that he be permitted to take steps for the revivor of a certain action of ejectment, in which James Ross, now dead, was plaintiff, and the relator defendant, alleged to be pending in said court, to the end that said cause might be brought to trial. The motion was based upon the affidavit of the relator, embodying the following statement of facts: The plaintiff in said action of ejectment claimed the premises under an execution sale founded upon a certain judgment by motion against the relator, the plaintiff in ejectment having redeemed under said sale as a creditor of the relator. The judgment under which said sale and redemption were had, was brought by the relator before this court by writ of error, no supersedeas having been obtained, and, pending said writ of error in this court, the execution under said judgment was levied upon the premises in question, and the sale and redemption as aforesaid followed, the plaintiff redeeming fr.om the purchaser at said sale. The case coming on for hearing before this court under a writ of error upon the validity of said judgment by motion, the said judgment was reversed by this court and the motion against the relator discharged. The record of this court showing its action upon the judgment, is exhibited with the affi
Under the Constitution of this. State, this court is declared to be a court of appellate jurisdiction only, under such restrictions and regulations as may be prescribed by law: Const. 1876, art. 6, sec. 2. But it may possess such other jurisdiction as now conferred by law upon the Supreme Court under the Constitution of 1834: Id.' And the latter in turn was of appellate jurisdiction only, with such other jurisdiction as then existed by law: Id. The “other jurisdiction” referred to is a kind of mythical entity, thus far not very clearly identified by the courts. It was held in-the case of Miller v. Conlee, 5 Sneed, 434, that the Constitution of 1834 deprived the Supreme Court of'
It is argued with very great ability that the court or tribunal over which thé defendant presided when this judgment was rendered, was no .court at all, and that the defendant was not either de jure or de facto a Judge of the Circuit Court. This is certainly so in the sense of that system of laws, organic and derivative, under which we now live, and under which we would have been living on the 10th of October, 1864, if that had been a season of profound peace instead of flagrant war. But a state of war unsettles the foundations of the social fabric, and paralyzes the law, and the will of a conqueror becomes a law unto itself. There can be no question, at this day, that the conquering power in the possession of the conquered territory has a right either to adopt the tribunals of justice already existing, or to abolish them and create others in their stead. Thus, it is said, the laws, usages and municipal regulations in 'force at the time of the conquest, remain in force until changed by the new sovereign: Calvin Case, 7 Coke, 17; 9 Pet., 711. There is no doubt of his power to change the laws of the conquered country, unless restrained by the capitulation or treaty. In the case of a country acquired by conquest, said Chancellor Walworth, no formal act of legislation is necessary to change the law; the mere will of the conqueror is enough: 17
Dismiss the petition.