The opinion of the court was delivered by
There are two insuperable objections in the way of the prosecutor: 1. The proceeding is a summary proceeding by a landlord to dispossess a tenant. The District Court act, like the Landlord and Tenant act, forbids an appeal or removal by certiorari. Comp. Stat., p. 1990, § 113; Comp. Stat., p. 3074, pi. 18g. The prohibition is absolute and forbids appeal or removal as well by landlord as by tenant- The tenant is protected by his right to bring an, action of trespass and to recover his damages. The landlord needs no review since there is no estoppel by a judgment against him (McWilliams v. King and Phillips, 32 N. J. L. 21, 28; Hopper and Broomhead ads. Chamberlain, 34 Id. 220, 223, 224), and he may immediately bring new proceedings, It is true there may be a certiorari where the District Court or justice of the peace is without jurisdiction, but the landlord cannot successfully maintain that position since if there was no jurisdiction the proceedings were rightly dismissed, and the judgment must be affirmed.
2. There is a more fundamental difficulty. The proceeding is against a tenant from year to year who holds over after his term has expired. Notice to quit is necessary. The landlord, of course, recognized this and attempted to give the tenant notice to quit. What he in fact did is thus stated in the affidavit on which the' proceeding is based: “Claimant caused a notice * * * requiring defendant to quit and deliver up possession of the said premises on the first day of May,. 1920, to be mailed to the defendant by registered mail by depositing the same in a sealed wrapper addressed to said Savoy
For the reasons stated the writ is dismissed, with costs.
