Fitzhugh v. Custer

HEMPHILL, Cit. J.

The first assignment- Will.he*disposed of very briefly. No motion .to dismiss nor action of- the court upon such motiop appears of record. In the opinion delivered by the judge there, is a casual observation from which it. may he inferred that such motion was made, but this furnishes no such evidence of the point or of the ruling- of the court as will authorize the exercise of appellate supervision.

The second assignment may be considered as embracing, though not very distinctly, two propositions:

1st. That the return was sufficient in its statement, and the writ should have therefore been refused. ,

2d. That if the truth of the fact stated in the return could be impeached in the same suit in which it was tiled, yet the judgment of the County Court being- valid, its obligation could not be disregarded.

The first proposition suggests a question of great importance in our practice, which has been discussed but very briefly, if at all, bv counsel, and which has not been decided in any of the cases for mandamus which liave'been before, the court. There is no doubt that at common law, if the return showed sufficient legal reason against the award of the writ, the proceedings on the mandamus terminated. Its verity could not be questioned in that, suit, and the only remedy of the. prosecutor was by bringing an action on the case, for a false return or a criminal information, where the rights of the public, rather than those of any individual in particular, were concerned; and if judgment .be given establishing the falsity of tin return, a peremptory mandamus would then be awarded. (1 Salk., 374; 2 Id., 431, 432; 11 Coke, 99, b; Wil. M. C., 427, 428, 429, 443.) This continued in all eases of mandamus until by the statute of 9 Anne, c. 20, the return to writs issued for offices and franchises in corporations and boroughs were made traversable as to their material facts, and such further proceedings were directed to be had as if the applicant for the writ, had brought his action for a false return. And by the statute of William 1V, c. 21, the same rule was extended to all cases for mandamus, and the prosecutor was authorized to plead to or traverse the return, and his antago-ni-t to take issue,'reply, or demur, and the same proceedings to be had as on action for a false return.

The mischiefs designed to be obviated by permitting the facts of the return to be immediately controverted and their truth or falsity ascertained are very forcibly depicted in the preamble to the statute of Anna. Many of the offices into winch divers persons had illegally intruded themselves were annual offices; and it liad been found very difficult, if not impracticable, by the laws then in being to bring the rights of such persons to the offices to trial and determination within the. compass of the year." And where they were not annual it was diflicnlt to determine the right before, such persons had done divers acts in their said oflices prejudicial to the peace, order, and good government within the cities, towns, &e., wherein they liad acted : “And whereas divers persons who liad a right to sn$h oflices, or to burgesses, franchises, &c., of such cities, have either been illegally turned out of the same or refused to be admitted thereto, having in many cases no other remedy to procure themselves to be admitted or restored thereto than by writs of mandamus, the proceedings on *198which are very dilatory and expensive, whereby great mischiefs have already ensued, and more are likely to ensue if not timely prevented.”

- The remedy provided was to require, the defendants to make a return of the first writ of mandamus, and to authorize the prosecutor, as already stated, to controvert the return aud have the matters at issue at once ascertained and determined.

'The statute of Anne has not been made of force in this State, nor has any one containing provisions of a similar character, specifically applicable to writs of mandamus, been adopted; and the question arises whether, under our system of procedure and pleadings, we may not well hold that the truth of all matters which are alleged in the pleadings iu any acliou may ahd should be ascertained and determined in the same suit, without the necessity of resorting to a second action for the express and sole purpose of determining whether tlie matters stated are true or false. That this proposition should be answered in the affirmative, it seems only necessary that it should be stated.’ If tlie facts can be controverted at all, they can be determined as well in one as iu two or any number of actions.

A controlling principle which pervades our entire system of civil jurisprudence is that which forbids a multiplicity of suits and requires tlie rights of the parties incident to tlie subject-matter of the suit, whether they be of' a legal or equitable character, to be determined iu a single controversy’'. This is conceived to he a great improvement over the system which permitted two suits in relation to the same subject-matter — one for the trial of the legal, and the other for the equitable rights of the parties — and which authorized' a judgment obtained iu one form to be perhaps- immediately enjoined by tlie same court under powers vested in a different jurisdiction. This rule of procedure requiring the rights of the parties to be tried in one action lias been enforced from the first organization of our courts, and under the former as well as the existing system of jurisprudence; and by tlie 7th section of the act organizing the District Court &c., [Laws of 184.0, p. 202,) the court is directed to grant all such orders, writs, or other process necessary to obtain tlie relief prayed for, and to so frame the judgments of the court as to afford all the relief which may he required by tlie nature of the case find which is granted by courts of law or equity. A marked characteristic of our system is the repudiation of two suits where'tlie matters at issue can be properly tried and determined in one; and the party entitled must have tlie judgment, whether his rights be founded oh tlie principles .of law or equity.

• If rights of law and equitable cognizance can be blended and tried in the same suit, and this for the buucl^cial purpose of putting an end to litigation and for the speedy and cheap administration of justice, it would seem lfiat no rule of law or practice could he tolerated under our system which would prohibit an inquiry into the facts pleaded in a suit and yet permit a second action, for that express purpose. If any advantage could be derived by the trial of the dispute as to tlie facts in a separate action, we might hesitate iu tlie rejection of tlie rule, however inappropriate and apparently repugnant to our .system of procedure. But there is none. Its only results are delay and. expense to the parties and their concomitant mischiefs.

It would be a fruitless task to attempt to explore tlie reasons upon which the rule was originally founded. Its absurdity and insufficiency for any good purpose are established, by its partial abolition nearly a century and a' luilf since in England, and its subsequent complete abrogation in all cases of mandamus.

The introduction of tlie writ of mandamus by name does not necessarily bring with it alL the rules of practice regulating the issue of the writ. The rules of pleading in cases of mandamus are judicious, aud should be enforced whefl not incompatible with statutory regulations. The certainty of pleading required both in tlie application aud the return was to some extent indicated, in tlie case of Cullem v. Latimer, decided at the present term. That *199the rules which govern the writs of mandamus at common law are modified as well by our statutes as by the structure and organization of our courts, and, we may add, in this case by the principles which lie at tire foundation of our system of procedure, was decided by tlie-Supreme Court of tlie Republic in the case of Bradley v. McCrabb, (Dallam, 508.) In the opinion it is stated that in deciding on the proper practice to be pursued under our laws and the organization of our courts, we derive but little assistance from an examination of the practice of the common-law courts of England, and the decisions thereon are no further binding than as they are applicable to the structure of our courts of justice. There the terms of the courts are frequent and long continued, and the difference between the time of the teste, and the return of the writ varies according to the distance of the respondent from the place where the sessions of the courts are liolden. Here the courts are held but twice in the year. The term of many of them does 'not exceed six days, which is two days less than the minimum period allowed in England between the teste and the return of writs of mandamus. The dissimilarity between the organization of the English and our courts is so great that no deduction can be drawn fr’om the English practice as to the proper period of notice under our judicial establishment. Tlie question then arises whether, on a just'interpretation of our statute laws, considering the powers of the District Courts and the objects to bo obtained by the remedy, a writ of mandamus can be returned to the term from which it issued. This question will admit of but. one answer. If we examine the usages of other courts where the common law prevails, we .will find that the rulé to show cause, the alternative, and the peremptory mandamus have all been granted at the same term of tlie court, &c.

This decision was made under the statute'of the 25th January, 1841, which directed judgés, in issuing writs of mandamus, to observe the rules which govern the writs of mandamus at common law, as, modified by tlie statutes of the Republic; and its principal object was to prevent writs issuing without notice to the respondent.

It was urged in that case that tlie defendant was entitled to the five days’ notice before the commencement of the term, under; the statute which directed all original process to bo executed five days before the return day thereof, (Daws of' 1886, 201,) but it was held in effect that the writ might be issued during the term, and that the defendant was entitled, neither to the five days’ previous notice, nor was he entitled to the period allowed in England, as our courts might often close before the expiration of the term of notice. This decision lias, it is believed, been generally approved; and in subsequent laws it lias been specially provided that writs of mandamus may be returned at the term at which they were issued.

If, from the character of tlie writ, the nature of the remedy, and the structure of our courts, we were authorized to disregard tlie positive rules fixed by either law in relation to notice, it seems that, in accordance with the principles regulating our system of procedure, we may disregard tlie ancient rule of common law requiring the facts pleaded in the answer to be controverted, not in the same, but in a new and separate action.

TVe proceed to examine the second proposition embraced in the assignment, viz, as to tlie power of the court to disregard-the judgment of the County Court vacating the election of-tlie 7th August, and treating its order as a nullity. It may be contended that, the court having-jurisdiction over tlie subject-matter and the parties, illicit- judgment is conclusive, however, irregular may have been tlie mode of arriving at their decision. The correctness of these positions may be admitted, but they leave untouched the controlling question in (he case, viz, whether the judgment ivas rendered by a court of competent jurisdiclion, or rather, whether tlie order vacating the election of the 7 th August [3emanated from a court, or from an unauthorized individual. Tlie boctrine contended for, that a judgment must stand unless reversed for error or *200set aside for fraud, does not apply where the want of jurisdiction is made a question. This may always be set up when a judgment is sought to be enforced or any benefit is claimed under it; and this is not inconsistent witli the principle which ordinarily forbids the impeachment or contradiction of a record. (Cow. & H.’s Notes to Phillips’s Ev., 800, note 551.)

In this case there is no impeachment of the verity of the record. The want of jurisdiction is shown upon its face. The entry commences by stating- that there was no quorum, and in a continuous narrative shows the submission to arbitration, the award of the arbitrators, and that this was made the judgment of the court. If a contested right to an office he the proper subject of arbitrament, and if, under the mies and principles of the common law, independent of the statute, rights cognizable by the County Court may be arbitrated, and the award, by appropriate proceedings, be made the judgment of the court, yet this award lias not the force of a judgment, for the reason that it was not rendered as such by a court. The members present, if anj, could exercise no judicial functions requiring a quorum. . The entry by the clerk of the judgment was unauthorized, and the whole proceeding is as absolutely null as i£ conducted before and determined by any private individual or individuals without the pretense of judicial authority. There being no error in the judgment of the court, it is ordered that the same be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.