39 La. Ann. 889 | La. | 1887
This controversy presents the question of a proper definition of the territorial jurisdiction of the Third City Court of New Orleans.
Under the provisions of Act No. 45 of 1880, its jurisdiction is limited to that portion of the parish of Orleans which lies on the right bank of the river Mississippi; and in an attempt of relator to sue a party resididing in New Orleans on the left bank in that court, the respondent judge maintained the exception of the defendant to his jurisdiction rations persones.
Hence arises the complaint of relator, who makes the following points in support of his proposition that the jurisdiction of the Third City Court extends to all portions of the parish of Orleans:
1st. That the Legislature had not the constitutional authority to limit the jurisdiction of the city courts created by the Constitution, to any portion of the parish of Orleans.
The city courts were created by Article 135 of the Constitution, which provides: “There shall be in the city of New Orleans three city courts, one of which shall be located in that portion of the city on the right bank of the Mississippi river.” * * * “The G-eneral Assembly shall regulate, the salaries, territorial division of jurisdiction, the manner of executing their process, the fee bill and proceedings which shall govern them.” * * *
From this plain and unambiguous language it appears clearly that after creating three city courts, and providing that one of them should be located on the right bank of the river, the framers of the Constitution wisely vested the Legislature with full and exclusive power to enact all laws which might prove necessary to set those courts in motion. It is worthy of note that the power to regulate their jurisdiction as to' territory, which is contested by relator, was expressly delegated in the article.
Hence, it was competent, under that power, for the Legislature to enact the third section of the Act No. 45, which reads: “That no person shall be sued before any other court than the one having jurisdiction over the place of his residence; but all the constables of said city courts shall have authority to execute process throughout the entire parish of Orleans.”
There is no inconsistency, as argued by relator’s counsel, between ' the restriction of the territorial jurisdiction of the courts and the authority granted to their various and respective constables to serve process throughout the entire parish of Orleans.
2d. Eelator’s second point is that Section 2, of Act 45 of 1880, which defines the territorial division of jurisdiction of the three city courts is violative of Article 46 of the Constitution, which reads: “ Thé General Assembly shall not pass any local or special law on the following objects: * * * regulating the practice or jurisdiction of any court or changing the rules of evidence in any judicial proceeding or inquiry before courts.” * * *
When weighed in the scales with the undisputed fact that the enactment of the section thus assailed was in obedience to the formal constitutional mandate contained in Article 135, the argument .of relator is too trivial to justify any further notice than a mere mention. Like all over-zealous litigants, relator, having gone beyond his depth, reaches out for a support which can but destroy him. If that enactment is unconstitutional, the city courts are yet in a state of chaos, and the very court which he invokes would thus be stripped of all power to entertain and determine his demand.
3d. His next contention is, that in extending the jurisdiction of the first and second oitv courts concurrently to all portions of the city of New Orleans on the left bank of the river, while it restricted the jurisdiction of the Third City Court to the right bank, the Legislature made an unconstitutional discrimination against said Third City Court. The injustice of the discrimination is not easily discernible. Under its effect the first and second city courts are denied jurisdiction over the right bank of the river just as clearly and effectively as the Third City Court is denied jurisdiction in that portion of the city which lies on the left bank of the river.
The reason which prompted the wisdom of locating a city court on the right bank of the river, which was manifestly the purpose of avoiding to litigants of that portion of the city the necessity of crossing a
But after all, the Legislature had the constitutional power to make the enactment, and the wisdom of its course is not a subject within the scope of judicial investigation.
4th. Relator’s fourth and last point is to the effect that the legislat tive delegation of power to the constable to execute process throughoutlie entire parish, necessarily includes that of citation, and that therefore the court must also have the power to issue such citation without territorial restriction.
That contention involves the proposition that the jurisdiction of the court must be measured by the powers of the constable. The argument is so weak that similar to brittle glass it falls to pieces by the mere handling. It has airead}' been shown what the law meant by the process which the constable can serve or execute in all portions of the parish. The Legislature surely did not mean process which did not and could not exist, under its own prohibition contained in the same section.
Our conclusion is therefore clear that the Third City Court of New Orleans has no jurisdiction ratione personw over residents of the left bank of the city, and that the respondent judge committed no error in maintaining defendant’s exception in the case of Joseph Levy & Bro. vs. J. F. Oser.
The writs prayed for by relator are therefore denied, and his application dismissed at his costs.