— The relator is the defendant in an action now pending before the respondent, who is one of the justices of the peace for the city of St. Louis. -The action is on a promissory note which the relator admits he executed. The plaintiff in the suit claimed to own the note, Which the relator denied. On a trial before a jury the relator interposed the defense of payment. The probative force of his evidence as to payment depended upon whether Fisher & Company, with whom the relator claimed to have had his dealings, were the agents of the plaintiff in the suit. The respondent admitted
It is conceded by the respondent that a justice of the peace has no power except what the statute gives him (Weeks v. Etter,
It is finally suggested by the respondent that an appeal was the relator’s remedy. But it suffices to say that the relator ought not to be compelled to resort to that remedy. He was entitled to a full and complete trial before the justice, which he did not get. Besides an appeal would not have
Our conclusion is that the respondent in directing tbe verdict of tbe jury in tbe case in question was guilty of an usurpation of judicial power (art. 1, chap. 55, R. S. 1899), wbicb rendered such verdict null and void. Tbis was not mere error or irregularity, but a sheer usurpation of a jurisdiction not conferred upon him by law. To restrain tbe exercise of an excess of jurisdiction, prohibition will lie. State ex rel. v. Aloe,
