140 P. 218 | Utah | 1914
The Fourth Judicial District Court, on the alleged ground of want of jurisdiction, refuses to hear and try a case appealed to it from a justice' court. We are ashed by mandamus to direct him to hear it.
A complaint in a case wherein the State of Utah was plaintiff and one Dart defendant, charging him with a misdemeanor, was filed in a justice court of Utah County. He appeared in the action for arraignment, and stood mute. Upon the justice’s direction, a plea of not guilty was entered for him. Then the defendant filed an affidavit for a change of venue on the ground of prejudice and bias of the justice, anl demanded the case be transferred to another justice of the county. The justice overruled the motion, and set the case for trial. The state put in its evidence and rested. The defendant offered none. The ease was thereupon submitted for decision. The justice found the defendant guilty as charged in the complaint,- and adjudged him to pay a fine of $150. From that judgment, the defendant prosecuted an appeal to the district court. The record was transmitted to that court, the case docketed, and the defendant there called for arraignment. He again stood mute. Again a plea of not guilty was entered for him. The case was set, and, when called for trial, the defendant moved a dismissal of the action on the ground that the justice had lost jurisdiction by the filing of the affidavit for a change of venue, and was without jurisdiction to thereafter hear the case and render a judgment; hence the district court acquired no jurisdiction by the appeal. The district court, holding with the defendant, refused to hear the case, dismissed the appeal, and remanded the case to the justice, with directions to transfer the case to another justice. So the state is here seeking by mandamus
It is conceded tbe justice bad jurisdiction of tbe offense charged and of tbe person of tbe defendant. Tbe claim made is that be lost or was ousted of jurisdiction by tbe filing of tbe affidavit. Tbe statute (Comp. Laws 1907, section 5132) provides:
“A change of tbe place of trial may be bad at any time before tbe trial commences: (1) When tbe defendant files an affidavit in writing, stating that be has reason to believe, and does believe, that be cannot have a fair and impartial trial of tbe action before tbe justice about to try the same, by reason of tbe bias or prejudice of such justice, tbe action must be transferred to a justice of tbe county agreed upon by tbe parties, or, if there is no agreement, to the nearest justice within tbe county to which such objection does not apply.”
Tbe affidavit was merely in tbe language of tbe statute. Let it be conceded that that was all that was necessary. And let it further be conceded, as is also urged, that, when tbe affidavit was filed it was tbe duty of tbe justice to transfer tbe case. Still tbe question is: Did bis ruling refusing to transfer it constitute mere error, or did tbe filing of tbe affidavit oust tbe court of jurisdiction to further proceed ? The case of Sate ex rel. Gallagher v. District Court, 36 Utah, 68, 104 Pac. 750, is cited to support tbe latter contention, and it is claimed tbe ruling of tbe district court refusing to take jurisdiction was largely based upon that case. Different statutes (R. S. 1898, section 3669, as amended by Laws 1905, chap. 92, section 1, and section 3672) were involved in tbe Gallagher Case. They relate to a change of venue in civil actions before justice courts, and provide that, when an affidavit is filed as by that statute provided, tbe justice “must change tbe place of trial without motion being made therefor and his jurisdiction over such adion shall cease upon the filing of such affidavit for all purposes” except to transfer tbe case. We think tbe statutes are dissimilar. By tbe statutes involved in tbe Gallagher Case tbe legislature expressly declared that, upon tbe
“is that, as the statute directs that the change of venue must be granted when the application is made in the form as therein indicated, upon the making of such application, the court lost jurisdiction of the case, and all acts of the court thereafter were wholly without warrant in law and void. We are not able to give our assent to this proposition. Undoubtedly .it was error on the part of the district court of Kay County not to grant the change of venue as asked for; the application being in accordance with the requirements of the statute. For its refusal to do so the order would, beyond question, have been reversed upon proper proceedings to the higher court. Such refusal, however, was but error, and did not defeat or oust the court of jurisdiction.”
There are cases supporting the view of the Oklahoma court; notably from the Missouri courts (State v. Shipman, 93 Mo. 147, 6 S. W. 97) and other courts. But we believe the greater number of cases and the weight of authority support the Kansas court. (State of Iowa v. Heacock, 106 Iowa, 191, 76 N. W. 654; City of Ottumwa v. Schaub, 52 Iowa, 515, 3 N. W. 529; Peters v. Keoppe, 156 Ind. 35, 59 N. E. 33; Turner, Sheriff, v. Conkey, 132 Ind. 248, 31 N. E. 777, 17 L. R. A. 509, 32 Am. St. Rep. 251; Carrow v. People 113 Ill. 550; Cantwell v. People, 138 Ill. 602, 28 N. E. 964; Jahnke v. State, 68 Neb. 154, 94 N. W. 158, 104 N. W. 154; State v. Hawkins, 23 Wash. 289, 63 Pac.
The truth is these statutes are mere venue statutes, and do not involve jurisdiction. When that is kept in mind, all is clear. Departing from it leads to confusion. Brown, in his
“These various matters mentioned above (disqualification of the judge, etc.) affect not the jurisdiction of the court, but incapacitates the court from disposing of the action differently. The better view of the matter is this, that when a court acquires jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and the parties to an action in a lawful manner, the jurisdiction cannot be ousted or lost by the erroneous exercise of the power conferred, and its judgment is not void.”
And in section 91:
“The reader must discriminate between a simple erroneous construction of a statute, the erroneous admission of testimony, the erroneous instruction of a jury or the erroneous ruling on a demurrer, from the erroneous construction of a constitutional right and erroneous assumption of jurisdiction; the former being simply errors of law, the latter being jurisdictional. In the one case, the acts of the court are simply voidable; in the other, the error goes to the power of the court itself.”
So does Mr. Justice Elliott, in Turner, Sheriff, v. Gonhey, supra. He says;
“The statute invests justices of the peace with general authority to conduct preliminary examinations and to recognize accused persons to the court clothed with criminal jurisdiction. The authority is extended over a general subject, and in this instance the assumption of jurisdiction was legal, and there was no judgment beyond that jurisdiction; that is, there was no excess of jurisdiction. . . . As the sufficiency of an affidavit for a change of venue, as “well as the question as to the time of filing and the like, are questions of procedure, it seems clear that such questions must be decided by the tribunal which rightfully entered upon the hearing of the ease, and that whether such questions are rightly or wrongly decided does not affect the question of jurisdiction. A wrong decision may constitute error, but it does not destroy jurisdiction. It is quite clear that the refusal of a judge of a superior court to call in another judge does not destroy jurisdiction, although it may be a palpable wrong entitling the injured party to relief in a direct attack. There is no valid reason why the same rule should not apply to an inferior tribunal invested with authority over the general class of eases of which the particular case is a member. Mischievous consequences must necessarily result from the doctrine that a refusal to grant a change of justices, or of venue, takes away all jurisdiction and makes the proceeding void.”
When a court of competent jurisdiction has legally acquired jurisdiction of subject-matter and of the parties, we never did take kindly to the proposition that its jurisdiction may be ousted by a flexible conscience of a suitor or retained by his wish. The justice here confessedly had jurisdiction of subject-matter — of the ofíense charged — and of the parties. After he acquired such jurisdiction, he was asked to transfer the case. He ought to have transferred it. He refused. In so ruling, he either misconceived or disregarded the statute under which the change was asked. Still, when a justice has legally acquired jurisdiction of subject-matter and of the parties, his jurisdiction, nevertheless, is not affected every time he thereafter misconstrues, misconceives, or misapplies a statute not involving subject-matter, jurisdiction, or parties, but mere procedure. The profession frequently has seen most ludicrous constructions and applications of statutes by justices in reaching conclusions in a case, and in some instances even a manifest disregard of law or evidence or both. Still the justice was within his jurisdiction. When a justice so acts, what is the remedy ? Appeal. What, under the statute, is the scope of the appeal? A trial de novo. Comp. Laws 1901, sections 5165, 5167. And, since the justice here had jurisdiction of subject-matter and of the parties, jurisdiction to render the judgment which was rendered by him, the appeal conferred jurisdiction on» the district court, not merely to review and correct errors, but to try the ease de novo. That here is the district court’s duty. The ruling which it made involved jurisdiction. It refused to assume or take jurisdiction when clearly the appeal conferred jurisdiction upon it.
So let the writ issue directing the district court to vacate the order of dismissal, to reinstate the case, set it for trial, and try it de novo. No costs.