27 Mont. 179 | Mont. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an application for a writ of certiorari to review an order of the district court of Deer Lodge county refusing to
Upon the presentation of the petition counsel for the plaintiff stated that the facts recited in the affidavit demand the application of the rule declared in State ex rel. Allen v. Napton, Judge, 24 Montana Reports, 450, 62 Pacific Reporter, 686, but the present case is wholly unlike the case which counsel cites in support of his position. In the Napton Case the.dis~ trict court had proceeded by making an order in an action of which it did not have jurisdiction. There Allen recovered before a justice of the peace a judgment against Gibbs, and Gibbs appealed to the district court- Thereupon Allen exl-cepted to the sufficiency of the sureties on the undertaking; none
We held that the district court had no jurisdiction of the action and, of course, was without power to dismiss it or to order a dismissal unless Allen complied with the conditions imposed by the court. The order requiring the undertaking to be filed and declaring that the action should stand dismissed in default thereof we declared void for lack of jurisdiction and for that reason annulled the order. Inquiry touching the jurisdiction of the court, to deny the motion to dismiss the appeal was not pertinent and the question was therefore reserved, — it was reserved not because there was any serious question in respect of what the answer should be, but merely because the question was not involved in the case.
The application is without merit. In this state certiorari is a remedy which may be successfully invoked only when an inferior tribunal, board, or officer exercising judicial functions has exceeded its or his jurisdiction, and the review may not extend beyond a determination whether authority — that is, jurisdiction — has been regularly pursued. Such is the settled rule which has so frequently been announced by this court that reference to the cases is unnecessary. Now, the question of whether or not the district court, even if it was without jurisdiction of the action, should have dismissed the appeal cannot be investigated in the present proceeding. Let it be granted that the court had no jurisdiction of the action. It had jurisdiction of the motion to dismiss the appeal, — that is to say, it possessed the power to hear and determine the motion, and such power necessarily implies authority to decide wrong as well as right. Hence the district court regularly pursued its authority
The application is therefore denied and the proceeding dismissed.
Denied.