28 Vt. 587 | Vt. | 1856
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an original proceeding in this court by way of petition served upon the opposite party, by process in the usual mode, setting forth, in substance, that a petition was pending in the county court, for the purpose of laying out a highway, in the town of Woodstock, through the defendant’s land, and that the report of the commissioners, establishing such highway, having been filed in that court, it was by such court decided, as matter of law, that they had no power to accept the report and establish the highway, on account of defects apparent on the face
In regard to the merits of the case, it seems to us to be governed by that of Rand v. Townsend, 26 Vt. 670, if the ground upon which the county court proceeded is not sound in law. And it seems to us that it is not. If it appeared, upon the face of the report, that the prevailing ground with the commissioners, in establishing the highway, was that of ornament and improvement of the court-house grounds, we should regard it as an insufficient basis upon which to lay the highway, and as equivalent to a report against its being laid. And in that case we do not think it would be competent for the county court to receive evidence, and establish the highway over the heads of the commissioners. I have never known it attempted, in any court in the state, to establish the laying out of a highway by independent proof of its fitness or necessity, when the commissioners, to whom the subject is required .to be referred, report against laying it.
But in the present case, we understand the prevailing motive and ground of action with the commissioners, in laying the road, was the public convenience and private necessity, and the matter of ornament merely incidental and accessary. In that view, and we think it the only fair and just view, when the whole report is taken into the account, it does not seem to us objectionable. The question of establishing the highway, being prima facie nfade out by the report, was open to be contested before the court, upon its merits, and should have been determined by them. And, as we held in Rand v. Townshend, the party is, in some form, upon proper application, entitled to have a remedy in this court.
In regard to the form of the remedy, and especially the particu-.
But since the subject is now properly before the court, as to the proper office of these different writs, it is not improper to examine it somewhat at length, as the subject has not often been much considered by the court. The statute, chap. 28, § 5, gives this court power to issue writs of “ error, certiorari, mandamus, prohibition and quo warranto, and all other writs and processes to courts of inferior jurisdiction, to corporations and individuals, that shall be necessary to the furtherance of justice,” &c.
The authority thus conferred has been regarded as co-extensive with the authority, in this respect, exercised by the court of King’s Bench, in England, so far as applicable to our condition and wants. And it has generally been the purpose of this court to adopt, substantially, the forms used in the King’s Bench. But the organization and course of proceeding, in the superior courts, in reference to actions pending in the inferior courts, is essentially different in England from what it is in this state. As this court is now constituted, we have no general original jurisdiction, either civil or criminal, and no jury trials. And it has never been the practice to bring cases from the inferior courts into this court for trial, which is the principal use of the writ of certiorari, in England, where it is more generally confined to criminal proceedings; 4 Black. Com. 320-321; 5 Petersdorff’s Ab. 114, [149]; 1 Bac. Ab. Tit. Certiorari ; F. 1ST. B. 245. But the cases reported under the title Certiorari in 5 Pet. Ab. 149, et seq., shows that the certiorari is the substitute for a writ of error, in cases where the proceedings are not according to the course of the common law, and where, by consequence, no writ of error lies; and it extends to such proceedings as laying highways, and other judicial proceedings and matters, in the sessions, and other inferior tribunals. But in our practice, we never, upon writs of error, remand a case which is brought into
It seems to us that the more appropriate remedy in cases like the present, where the inferior court disposes of the matters upon some incidental question, and decline to hear the case upon its merits, is a writ of mandamus, in the nature of a procedendo, as was held by the supreme court of the United States, in Livingston v. Dorgenois, 7 Cranch 577, 2 Curtis 677; and as was virtually done, in ex parte, Crane, 5 Pet. 190, where a mandamus was issued’ to the judge of the circuit court, in the district of New York, requiring him to sign a hill of exceptions. The writ of mandamus is the supplementary remedy, so to speak, where the party lists a clear right, andi no other appropriate redress, to prevent a failure of justice; 3 Black. Com. 110; 12 Pet. Ab. 438, (309.) It is the absence of a specific legal remedy, which gives the court jurisdiction ; 2 Sel. N. P., Title, Mandamus. But the party must have a specific legal right; Rex v. Barker, 3 Burrow 1263; Ellenborough, Ch. J., 8 East 219. The remedy extends to the control of all inferior tribunals, corporations, public officers, and even private persons, in some cases; but more generally the English court of King’s Bench declines to interfere, by mandamus, to require- a specific performance of a contract, where no public right is concerned; Lord Mansfield, in King v. Barker, 3 Burrow 1261-1270; Angell & Ames on Corp. 761; The King v. The Mayor of Colchester, 2 Term 260; The King v. Corporation of Bedford Lead, 6 East 356. There is almost no end to the cases upon this subject. They will be found digested, under the title Mandamus, in Petersdorff’s Ab. and Bacon’s Ab. >
The procedendo seems to be only a particular form of the man•damus, and often to accompany the certiorari, and indeed always, perhaps, where the case is remanded for further proceedings in the inferior court. So that in the present case, if the certiorari had issued, and the record been actually brought into this court, all we
The procedendo is always accorded where the case is more proper to be tried in the inferior court; Pope v. Vaux & Wife, 2 Black. 1060. But the mandamus and procedendo is not to require the inferior court to render any particular judgment, but to proceed and give judgment, notwithstanding some alleged excuse. Ex parte Hoyt, 13 Pet. 279. Nor will a mandamus be accorded where the party has an appeal to the same court where the mandamus is asked. Ex parte Whitney, 19 Pet. 404. And in this case, we prefer this mode of redress to that of certiorari, only because we can, in this mode, accomplish all that is desired, without bringing the case here before it is finished in the inferior court.
The case of Walker v. The London and Blackwell Railway, 3 Q. B. 744, is a case almost precisely in point. The sheriff was required to hold inquisition upon petitions for land damages against railways. Upon the trial of the plaintiff’s case, the sheriff directed the jury to find a verdict for the defendants, on the ground that the plaintiff was not entitled to compel the company to purchase his property. The Queen’s Bench, on application for a peremptory mandamus, decided that the writ must issue, requiring the sheriff to proceed and assess the damages, disregarding his former judgment and the verdict of the jury. The form of the writ there issued was a mandamus, in the nature of a procedendo, as in the present case. But very likely the same thing might only be done by mandamus, in regard to those tribunals to which the superior court had power to issue the writ of certiorari. For if that were taken away, by statute, it would be regarded as an evasion to accomplish the same thing, more directly, by a mandamus; Rex v. Justices of Yorkshire, 1 Adol. & El. 563; see In re Edmundson, 24 Eng. R. 169.
The petitioners having amended the prayer of the petition, by adding thereto, “ or mandamus, or other appropriate remedy, in the discretion of the court,” the order is made.
That a writ of mandamus, in the nature of a procedendo, do