77 N.J.L. 448 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The sole question for determination upon this application is one of practice, viz., whether a justice of the Supreme Court who allows a writ of certiorari may subsequently, and before the return of the writ, vacate the allo-catur after hearing and upon due notice.
The “Act relative to the writ of certiorari ’’ Revision of 1903 (Pamph. L., p. 343, § 1), empowers a justice of the Supreme Court to allow the writ in term time or in vacation, and also empowers him to make all necessary orders thereon. Section 4 of the act authorizes the justice to grant a rule to show cause why the writ should not be allowed, “and to make the same returnable before himself or before the court in banc,” the rule to have the same effect as if allowed by the court.
.The first section of the act is substantially the provision that was enacted in 1865 (Pamph. L., p. 799), and which has been re-enacted in huic vei'bis in all subsequent revisions of the subject.
Rule 60 of the Supreme Court provides that the justice who allowed a writ of certiorari may order a vacation of the allo-catur. Under this rule it is quite clear that the justice who granted this writ was well within his power in ordering a vacation of the allocatur upon grounds which, if they had been presented in the first instance upon the ex parte application, would have resulted in a denial of the writ.
This result is reached not only from a consideration of the rule referred to, but in view of the common-law application to the writ itself, which originally issued out of the King’s
Originally the King’s Bench, before the passage of any statute on the subject; exercised the power of controlling the writ after it had issued in cases where it was likely to be misused, or where it was misdirected, or where it was otherwise bad in point of law, to the extent of quashing it when necessary. Tidd’s Pr., supra. If the writ was not returned with the record, it was customary, upon notice of an irregularity in its issue, to grant a supersedeas, which operated as a revocation of the writ. Daniel v. Phillips, 4 Durnf. & E. 499.
Chief Justice Kirkpatrick, in Ludlow v. Ludlow, 1 South. 444, traces the history of the allocatur when allowed by a justice of the King’s Bench at Chambers, and deduces from his analysis of the cases that, at common law, and prior to the enactment of the statute 1 and, 2 W. & M., it was customary for a single justice to grant a fiat, which was, in effect, an order directing that the writ issue, and, upon the filing of that order, the writ was issued by the clerk. The statute 5 and 6 W. & M. expressly established the practice of applying for the writ to the justice at chambers, and required him, if he allowed it, to endorse thereon his allowance, to which act the term allocatur was applied. It will be perceived, therefore, that the allocatur to the writ is, in effect, but a substitute for the earlier common-law fiat, which, like all orders or rules made by a single justice of the King’s Bench, was, until return made to the writ, within the power of the justice granting it to amend, modify or recall.
The power of amendment or correction thus exercised was also, it will be observed, a power analogous to that exercised by the Court of King’s Bench in banc, when a supersedeas was issued and operated as a vacation of the writ in case of irregularity or inadvertence in its allowance. Tidd’s Pr., supra.
In the case at bar the writ was allowed on September 10th, 1908, and was returnable on September 30th before this court.
We perceive no error in this, and, therefore, we deny the application to vacate the order vacating the allocatur, with costs.