State ex rel. Lytle v. Superior Court

Morris, J.

Application for peremptory writ of prohibition, the issuance of which involves the constitutionality of Laws 1909, page 82, chap. 49, entitled:

“An Act relating to the dividing of counties into districts for judicial purposes, and for holding sessions of the Superior Court of the State of Washington at places other than the county seat, and providing means to make this act effective, and defraying the expenses incident thereto, and declaring an emergency.”

The entire act is involved in the questions submitted to us for determination. It will, therefore, be necessary to set forth *382its provisions quite extensively, for a proper understanding of our discussion of the points involved.

Section 1 provides for holding sessions of the superior court at places other than the county seat, whenever such sessions shall be determined upon the manner in the act provided. Section 2 provides that a majority of the board of county commissioners, whenever they determine it to be to the best interests of the people, shall divide the county into two or more judicial districts, and upon such determination such action shall be submitted to the judge or judges of the superior court for his or their approval and confirmation. Section 3 provides for holding sessions of the court in the designated and approved places whenever business therein .shall require. Section 4 provides that, in forming such districts and designating the place for holding court, the board shall be governed by considerations of convenience and economy. Section 5 empowers the board to provide a jail and place for holding court, to be paid for out of the general county fund. Section 6 and 7 provide for the appointment of necessary deputy clerks and deputy sheriffs, who shall reside at the place designated; for the payment of their salaries and furnishing them with necessary supplies and records; the deputy clerk to be provided with a seal, the same as used by the county clerk. Section 8 provides for the duplication of all lienable judgments and decrees, one to be filed in the office of the deputy clerk, and the other, duly certified as a correct copy, shall be transmitted to and filed in the office of the county clerk. Section 9 arranges for the consecutive numbering of the districts, commencing with district No. 1. Section 10 provides for the purpose of determining the proper district any action shall be triable in; that each district shall be considered as a separate and distinct county; and the law applicable to the venue of actions shall apply to each district as if such district constituted a separate and distinct county. Section 11 provides for granting a change of venue from one district to another as from one county to *383another. Section 12 provides that the judgments and orders of the court in any district shall have the same effect throughout the county except that sales shall be made at the court house in the district. Section 13 provides that the only liability for jury duty shall be in the district in which the citizen may reside, and for the purposes of this act each district shall be considered as a separate and distinct county. Section 16 provides for the return of all process issued out of •each district court, to be made to the proper district which shall be disclosed in the process, and that the clerk shall style himself as the clerk of the court or county, and not the clerk of any district. Section 17 provides that the style of all actions shall be as now, except that the number of the district shall be added. Section 18 provides for trial of persons charged with crime in the district in which the crime is alleged to have been committed, and for the purpose of determining the venue, each district shall be considered as though it composed a separate and distinct constitutional county. The remaining sections of the act need not be referred to.

The relators claim the act is unconstitutional, in this: (1) That the act restricts the jurisdiction of the superior courts. (2) The creation of a judicial district is a legislative power that cannot be delegated to a board of county commissioners, or to judges of the superior court. (3) The act violates § 4, art. 11, of the constitution providing for a uniform system of county government, by authorizing the creation of unlimited judicial districts. (4) The act violates § 2, art. 14, of the constitution, in authorizing a partial removal of the county seat, without a vote of the people. (5) The act unconstitutionally authorizes the division of counties for judicial purposes. (6) The act violates § 22, art. 1, of the constitution, which guarantees to accused persons the right to have a speedy public trial by a jury of the county.

It is not necessary to discuss each of these several assignments; if the constitutionality of the act cannot be sustained upon any one good reason, it is immaterial in what *384other respects, if any, it is in conflict with the constitution. Section 5, art. 4, of the constitution provides that: “There shall be in each of the organized counties of this state a superior court,” for which one judge is provided until otherwise directed by the legislature. The plain mandate of this section is one court, with as many sessions as there áre judges. It was the apparent intention of the framers of our constitution to make the county the judicial unit for the superior court, leaving, as a matter of proper legislative enactment, the determination of the proper number of judges to be attached to the court in each county. The constitution being a limitation of power, it follows that there is no power vested in the legislature, nor in any board of county commissioners, nor in any judge of any superior court, to divide this constitutional judicial upit into judicial districts, or other territorial limitations less than the county itself. The plain and manifest intendment of this section is that, it being conceded the time would come when by reason of the growth of population and business, one judge could not properly handle the business of the court, such increased business was to be provided for, not by the creation of additional superior courts, but by the creation of additional judges, or, under other constitutional provisions, the creation of additional counties, — one court, with as many judges as might be necessary. The words, “a superior court,” as used in the constitution of Connecticut, are held, in Smith v. Hall, 71 Conn. 427, 42 Atl. 86, to mean that there shall be one, and only one, tribunal by that name.

Respondents contend that the act does not purport to provide for additional superior courts, but for a holding of the court only in different districts. We cannot so read the act. By its provisions the court in each district is made independent of any other court; its jurisdiction, its procedure, pertains solely to itself; it is dressed in all the statutory paraphernalia of a court; it has its own records for the entry of its orders, judgments, and decrees; it has its own officials, who *385must reside at its situs; it has its own seal, its own jail, its own courthouse; it grants and receives changes of venue from other courts; it has a distinct name and process; it has its own list of trial jurors, its juridical sales are made at its own door; it has a distinctive style for all actions and proceedings over which it assumes jurisdiction.

Under what process of reasoning can it be said that such courts are one and the same court? Can a court have two seals? Can a court grant a change of venue from itself to itself? Can a court have a distinctive title and style of process in one section of a county and a different in another? Can a court enter its orders, judgments, and decrees in records which are not its own records? Will it be contended that a summons requiring a defendant to appear in the superior court of Chehalis county for district No. 1 is fully met, so as not to subject him to a default judgment and the consequent loss of his property, by an appearance within the twenty days in the superior court of Chehalis county for district No. 2? If it is the same court, yes; because a defendant cannot be required to enter his appearance twice in the same action and at two different places. Yet, under the provisions of this act, it is apparent that such an appearance would subject any defendant to a default judgment, because he had not appeared within the time and within the court designated in the summons; he had not appeared in the court in which his action was triable.

Section 10 determines the place of trial of actions in each district as if each district was a separate and distinct county. Section 11 has a similar provision in regard to change of venue from one court to another, and for such purpose each district is constituted a separate and distinct county. If for the purpose of determining the place of trial, and if for the purpose of changing the venue, each district is constituted a separate and distinct county, how can it be said that the courts in which these several actions are triable, and *386from which and to which these changes of venue are taken, are not separate and distinct courts? In section 18, for the purpose of the venue of criminal actions, the act attempts to go a step further, in providing that each district shall be considered as though it composed a separate and distinct constitutional county. One might well inquire how it could be that the place where a crime is committed and the place where the accused is triable for the offense is a separate and distinct constitutional county, and yet the court in which he is tided is not a separate and distinct constitutional court. If persons accused of crime are not to be tried in “separate and distinct constitutional” courts, it is to be feared the legislature has labored in vain in giving a criminal code and laws to the people of this state.

The constitution providing that “there shall be in each of the organized counties of this state a superior court” (art. 4, § 5), and the constitution further providing that “no new county shall be established which shall reduce any county to a population less than 4,000, nor shall a new county be formed containing less than 2,000” (art. 11, § 3), it follows that there could be no superior court within any territorial limitation containing a less population than two thousand. Yet, the only limitation governing the commissioners in the establishment of these new courts is “whenever they determine it to be for the best interests of the people of the county.” No rules nor prerequisites are given as to how or when this discretion is to be exercised, and under it, should they so determine, they could provide for the establishment of this court in every precinct in the county, with all its attendant paraphernalia of clerks, sheriffs, courthouses, and jails, entailing useless and unnecessary burdens of taxation upon the people; and while this goes more to the wisdom of the act than to its legality, and is therefore a legislative and not a judicial question, it is of the character of reasoning not infrequently discussed by courts in dealing with questions affecting the legality of legislative enactment.

*387A good illustration of this may be found in the case of Lindsley v. Board of Supervisors, 69 Miss. 815, 11 South. 336, in determining a like question to that before us. Prior to 1859 the legislature of Mississippi passed an act dividing Hinds county into two judicial districts, and providing for the holding of the circuit court in each district, and the drawing of a petit jury from the freeholders of each district. Alfred (a slave) was charged with murder, and upon his trial contended that the jury was not a constitutional jury, in that it was drawn from a district within the county and not from the whole county. The only constitutional provisions bearing upon the point were as follows: “In all proceedings by indictment or information the accused hath a right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the county where the offense is committedand “The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.” The court held there was no inhibition in either of these two sections against the division of counties into judicial districts and the drawing of jurors from such districts. In 1890 a new constitution was adopted in Mississippi, which made no change in the provisions respecting courts or judicial districts, and the court held in Lindsley v. Board of Supervisors, supra, that by the adoption of the same provision in the new constitution the construction placed upon it by the court in the Alfred case was likewise adopted. But the court adds:

“In the six counties named the spectacle was presented of practically twelve counties in nearly all but names. While each of the six had one name, and one set of county officers, elected by the electors of the county, and was but one for certain purposes, it had two seats of justice, two circuit and chancery courts, two Courthouses, two jails, two sets of record books; in fact, it was double as to nearly everything that can be called ‘county matters.’ All of this came about gradually, step by step, from the seemingly harmless enactment sustained by the decision of Alfred v. State. Had the appalling results which have flowed from it been foreseen by the court, it is incredible that it would have made that unfortu*388nate decision, but it was made, and we have the evil results, and had them when the constitution of 1890 was adopted, which contains no word of condemnation or prohibition or restriction of the practice of dividing counties into court districts.”

In the above case the act was by the legislature itself, and thus much stronger in its constitutional phases than the act in question, where the legislature attempts not to exercise the power itself, but delegates it to boards of county commissioners.

In Arkansas an act was passed dividing Sebastian county into two judicial districts, one to be styled the “Circuit Court of the County of Sebastian for the Fort Smith district ;” the other, “The Circuit Court of the County of Sebastian for the Greenwood district.” It was contended the act was unconstitutional, in that it violated that section providing that, “No county now established by law shall ever be reduced by the establishment of any new county or counties to less than six hundred square miles.” The court in part thus treats this contention:

“The enactment, under consideration, attempts to divide Sebastian county into two judicial districts, . . . and provides that each ‘shall be as independent of, and distinct from each other, and shall hold the same relation to each other as if they were courts of different constitutional counties of this state, and shall be deemed, for all purposes of this act, separate and distinct counties, with original and exclusive jurisdiction within their respective territorial limits.' Thus it will be seen that the legislature is providing for all the attributes of a county, and creating all the essential features of these public corporations . . . the individuality of Sebastian county is entirely destroyed and obliterated. . . . The clerk must keep two offices, one in each district, and all matters of public record pertaining to either must be kept separate and distinct. . . . The objects of this law were to create two separate and distinct districts in Sebastian county, with all the powers and immunities of any constitutional county of the state, the area being less *389than six hundred square miles, which object, if carried out, would destroy the identity of Sebastian county”; Patterson v. Temple, 27 Ark. 203;

and the contention of the unconstitutionality of the act was sustained.

We fail to see how the legislature, or any other body, can create a separate and distinct constitutional county, or a district for judicial or other purposes which is to be considered and regarded as a separate and distinct constitutional county, unless it be after first in some way determining that constitutional condition precedent required in the establishment of a “separate and distinct constitutional county.” Farquharson v. Yeargin, 24 Wash. 549, 64 Pac. 717. Under § 6, art. 4 of the constitution, the superior court has original jurisdiction in all cases in equity, certain enumerated cases at law, all felonies, certain misdemeanors, and other enumerated actions and proceedings, including appellate jurisdiction in cases arising in justice’s court in their respective counties. This section, in connection with other sections in the same article, provides a complete system of superior courts, and taken together they form a limitation beyond which the legislature may not go.

“It was the object of the framers of the constitution to mark out a complete judicial system. . . . Such a system cannot be changed by action of the legislative department, except when the power to make the change is conferred by the constitution itself.” Ex parte Cox, 44 Fla. 537, 33 South. 509, 61 L. R. A. 734.

Neither can the legislature pass an act which in any wise modifies, alters, or changes the jurisdiction of the superior courts of the respective counties, as does this act, by taking away a jurisdiction which, under the general scope and purpose of the constitution, is co-extensive with the county, and substituting a jurisdiction which is controlled or limited to any extent by a geographical division, less than the whole *390comity. Counsel for respondents admit such to be the law, but they contend, quoting from- their brief:

“The act in question does not diminish the jurisdiction of the superior court one iota. There is not a single action or proceeding which under the law was cognizable by a superior court before the passing of this act but what is equally cognizable by that court under the act. The only difference is that the court does not transact all of its business at the county seat, but it may transact part of it elsewhere.”

Such argument might be plausible were it not for the provisions of § § 8, 10, 11, 13, 18, and 21. What jurisdiction does the superior court of Chehalis county for district No. 1 have over the orders, judgments, and decrees, or other instruments, not a lien upon real estate, emanating from the superior court of Chehalis county for district No. 2, which, under the provisions of the act, are to be entered only in the records of district No. 1? Or, if it be claimed that it has such a jurisdiction, then we have the situation, unknown to legal procedure, of a court dividing its original jurisdiction over its own records with another court in which there is no provision for the entry of such a record. The provision of section 10, if it means anything at all, is that the venue of all actions shall be determined as if the district were a separate and distinct county. What jurisdiction, then, has the court in district No. 1 over those actions, the proper venue of which under this provision is in district No. 2? Or, if it be said that the jurisdiction is the same and original in both, why the meaningless provision for a change of venue as from one county to another, as provided for in § 11 ? What jurisdiction, if any, has the court in district No. 1 over the drawing of jurors in district No. 2, and the use and control of them as attempted to be provided for in § 13? And what is the meaning of § 18, in providing that in all criminal actions the accused shall be tried in the district where the offense was committed, and for that purpose each district shall be considered as a separate and distinct constitutional county ?

*391Every constitutional county in this state has conferred upon its superior court a certain jurisdiction, and the attempt of this act to consider the district as a separate and distinct constitutional county is nothing less than an attempt to take from the superior court of Chehalis county a jurisdiction which under the constitution it now has, and divide that jurisdiction between the superior court of district No. 1 and the superior court of district No. 2, each district for that purpose being a separate and distinct constitutional county. Both the courts have together the same jurisdiction, both original and appellate, as is now conferred upon the superior court of the county; but under this act, such jurisdiction is divided into as many parts as there may be districts created by the board of county commissioners. Such being the purpose and effect of the act, it is rendered invalid. Wilson v. Roach, 4 Cal. 362; Zander v. Coe, 5 Cal. 230; Allen v. Kent Circuit Judge, 37 Mich. 473; Flanigan v. Guggenheim Smelting Co., 63 N. J. L. 647, 44 Atl. 762.

The litigants of Chehalis county have conferred upon them, under the sections of the constitution above quoted, rights which neither the legislature nor board of county commissioners could take away. They have the right to go into the superior court of Chehalis county for relief, and that right cannot be abridged by compelling them to submit their controversies to any superior court in any territorial district less than the entire county. Mason v. Ausable Granite Works, 18 N. Y. Supp. 267.

Having reached the conclusion that the act in question is in conflict with the sections of the constitution above quoted, we do not discuss the remaining contentions of invalidity.

Let the writ issue.

Rudkin, C. J., Parker, Mount, Gose, and Crow, JJ., concur.