7 Mich. 341 | Mich. | 1859
The first objection is a want of jurisdiction in the circuit court commissioner. There is a statute authorizing him to hear and try the complaint, but it is said the statute, in that particular, is in conflict with the Constitution, and is therefore void.
The following are the only constitutional provisions bearing on the subject: “The judicial power is vested in one Supreme Court, in circuit courts, in probate courts, and in justices of the peace. Municipal courts of civil and criminal jurisdiction may be established by the Legislature in cities.”— Art. 6, §1. By §16 of the same article: “The Legislature may provide by law for the election of one or more persons in each organized county, who may be vested with judicial powers not exceeding those of a judge of the circuit court at chambers.”
The whole judicial power, it is argued, is by the first section vested in the courts therein mentioned; and that being the case, that it is not in the power of the Legislature to vest any part of it elsewhere — not even in a
It is to be observed the section makes no exception whatever, not even of judicial acts done at chambers; and yet it is obvious from the- sixteenth section they were not intended to be included, for this last section authorizes the Legislature to provide by law for the election of one or more persons in each organized county, with judicial powers not exceeding those of a circuit judge at chambers. The action of the Legislature under this section would be unavailing, if the circuit judge has no judicial powers at chambers ; and to give the sixteenth section effect we are compelled to make an exception to the implication that confines the whole judicial power to the courts mentioned. Without stopping to inquire what is meant by judicial powers at chambers, we will proceed to inquire whether it is not highly probable that other excejrtions were intended by the Convention that formed the Constitution.
Our present Constitution was not the formation of a new government, but the continuation of a government formed under a previous Constitution, whose supposed or real defects it was intended to correct; and in construing it we are bound to look to the distribution of judicial power under the old Constitution, and to discover, if we can, the evil, if any, arising from that distribution, and intended to be corrected by the new Constitution.
It is not very clear what the powers of a judge of the circuit court at chambers are under the Constitution. It would seem they must be either acts done out of court in a cause pending in court, or all judicial acts which the circuit judge may be authorized by statute to perform out of court, whether they relate to a cause pending in court or not. If this last be the true construction, it would not authorize a justice of this court to hear a case of habeas corpus, but it would a circuit judge or circuit court commissioner. It would also give the circuit court commissioner jurisdiction in the case before us.
We have a statute older than our present Constitution, for the appointment of commissioners for the allowance of claims against the estates of deceased persons. They are appointed by the judge of probate, but they are not a part of the probate court. They fix them own time and place for hearing and adjudicating on all claims presented against the estate. The probate coimt has no control Whatever over their action, and an appeal lies from their allowance or rejection of a claim to the circuit court. Proceedings under the act against fraudulent debtors are,
By courts, as the word is used in the Constitution, we understand permanent organization for the administration of’ justice, and not those special tribunals provided for by law, that are occasionally called into existence by particular exigencies, and that cease to exist with such exigencies.
Under our former Constitution, the Legislature had unlimited power to create inferior courts. In the exercise of this power the Legislature, at the commencement of the state government, created a court of chancery, and circuit courts with powers, except in chancery, analagous. to our present circuit courts. These, with the Supreme court, probate courts and justices’ courts, established by the Constitution, were our only courts at the commence-, ment of the state government. In 1840 the Legislature established a district court for the county of Wayne, and gave it cognizance of all crimes, misdemeanors and offenses, in as full and ample a manner as the circuit court of said county had cognizance thereof. This act was repealed ip 1843, and district courts were established in the counties of Wayne, Oakland, Washtenaw and Jackson, with like.
The construction contended for would be attended with imany inconveniences, without any corresponding benefits. It would not only lumber the courts with much unimportant business that has heretofore -been done, without complaint, by the ephemeral statutory tribunals of which we have spoken, but it would, in many counties where the circuit court sits but twice a year, almost amount to a denial of justice, in many cases. And the Convention must have foreseen that these inconveniences would result from denying all power to such special tribunals. Under such circumstances we do not, on a supposed implied constitutional inhibition, feel ourselves warranted in declaring the statute unconstitutional giving the circuit court commissioner jurisdiction in the case before us.
We do not wish it to be understood, or inferred, from what we have said, or in holding this law constitutional, as we do, that it is competent for the Legislature to vest circuit court commissioners or other officers with any power it may think proper.
The next objection is that the right to the possession of the land was in the personal representatives of the deceased, and not in the plaintiff, at the time of making the complaint.
Her husband having died without issue, and without a will, the land descended to her for her natural life. — Comp. L. §2812.
Previous to the Revision of 1846, the personal representa-, tive had nothing to do with the real estate, except that when the personal estate was insufficient to pay the debts of the deceased, and the expenses of administration, he might sell it, or so much of it as was necessary for that purpose, on obtaining a license from the probate court. The. real estate descended to the heir, who alone was entitled to the possession, and to all subsequent rents and profits, and might sell it, subject to the right of the personal representative to sell it for the payment of debts, on obtaining the requisite license. It sometimes happened both the per-, sonal and real estate were insufficient to pay the debts of decedent, and as the law then stood the heir would, notwithstanding, be entitled to the rents and profits from the death of his ancestor, until the estate could be represented as insolvent to the probate court, and a license be. obtained, and a sale made. The object of the present statute, we think, is to prevent this injustice to creditors, and to have.
The true construction of the statute, we think, is, that the right of possession is in the heir, until the executor or administrator takes possession, or otherwise claims his right under the statute.
It be must certified to the circuit court, that the circuit court commissioner had jurisdiction; that plaintiff was entitled to maintain the action in her own name, and that there was no error in the rulings of the circuit court on "the trial.
I agree entirely with my brethren as to the right of the widow to sustain this proceeding in her own name.
As to the power of the commissioner, I concur in the result, but I place my concurrence on the ground that the power in question, in the present case, is one which was possessed and exercised by such commissioners, and by the several circuit judges out of court, previous to, and at the time of, the adoption of the Constitution.