Bucky v. Willard

The Chief Justice

delivered the opinion of the court..

Jurisdiction is defined to be an authority or power which a man hath to do justice in causes of complaint brought before him. Tomlin’s Law Dic., 6 Peters, 709. “Any movement by a court is necessarily the exercise of jurisdiction. If the law confers the power to render a judgment or decree, then the court has jurisdiction. What shall be adjudged or decreed between the parties, and with which is the right of the case, is judicial action by hearing and determining it.”'' 12 Peters, 718; 2 How., 338.

The Circuit Court was not invoked in the proceedings here brought in question to entertain any cause or matter,, or to render a judgment upon a demand of any amount whatever.' The exercise of the jurisdiction of that court was not called into requisition by any process, pleading or proceeding, for the purpose of establishing any indebtedness or liability or right of property. It is not pretended that that court exercised any of its functions, or that its “ jurisdiction” was called into action for any of the purposes impliedly inhibited by the Constitution.

The objection is this, that as the Circuit Court could take no jurisdiction of an action upon a demand less than one hundred dollars, therefore it must follow that it was incompetent in the Legislature to conier upon it any power to enforce a judgment rendered by a justice’s court; and because the Circuit Court could not render a judgment in the case,, therefore there cannot be a judgment of the Circuit Court created by any process other than by the exercise of its jurisdiction, and consequently that its process cannot be legitimately used to enforce a judgment so created. This *333is the argument deduced from the position of the appellant and from the assignment of error.

Assuming, for the purposes of this case, that the Legislature has no power to authorize a judgment to he entered as “a judgment of the Circuit Court” which the court itself has not power to enter, the inquiry still remains whether the Legislature may not .prescribe the manner in which a judgment of a justice’s court may become a lien upon real property, and the manner in which such a lien may be enforced.

It is within the province of the Legislature to prescribe the “ powers and duties ” of justices of the peace. The Legislature may authorize them to render judgments, but prohibit them from issuing executions, conferring that duty upon the clerk of the Circuit Court; the power and jurisdiction of •the Circuit Court not being called into action in any degree. The Constitution authorizes the Legislature to prescribe •the duties of the clerk, and there is nothing in the matter of his office which makes it incompatible to confer upon him the duty of issuing process under his hand or under the seal of any court, of which seal he may be the custodian, for the enforcement of a justice’s judgment. Nor would this trench .upon the power or jurisdiction of the Circuit Court, or call ■for its exercise either by the court or by the clerk. Whether a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace may, in the mode indicated by the forty-third section of the act of 1875, become “ a judgment of the Circuit Court,” is, therefore, a material question in the case presented. By striking out all the words of that section which seem to give justice’s judgments the character or name of judgments of the Circuit Court, or by treating all such words as mere surplusage and nugatory, there still remains the provision that transcripts of justices’ judgments may be filed and docketed in the office ■of the clerk of the Circuit Court, and that from that time the judgment shall be enforced m Wee mcmner as judgments *334of the Circuit Courts; and by the forty-fourth section the-execution thereon shall’be issued by the clerk to the sheriff, “ and have the same effect - and be executed in the same-manner as other executions of the Circuit Court.” The-direction of the statute is to the clerk to issue an execution, not to the court, nor need the execution be characterized as an execution of the Circuit Court, as the statute in effect merely requires that the execution and the proceedings thereon be assimilated to the form used by the Circuit Court, and also to the manner of enforcing it.

In all these requirements the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court does not enter. The clerk has certain duties to perform in his relations to the Circuit Court. The duty in-, question has no reference to any act of that court, or of its* judge, and it does not seem that the judge or the court has-any office to perform in relation to a transcript of a judgment filed with the clerk.

The object of the statute in question was to remedy a> • serious evil. Formerly, it is said, justices of the peace, whose-places of business were at their dwelling-houses, and whose-dockets were often the fly-leaves of their account books,, issued executions to constables, who levied upon, sold and conveyed the titles of real estate, making return of the process “ when satisfied ” to the justice. The Legislature probably realized that the titles of real estate, dejsending upom such frail records and such uncertain acts of minor officers,, were often rendered uncertain and unsafe, and hence, for the-purpose of preserving records so important,' and affording; the means of tracing titles with greater certainty, and of protecting rights so important, passed the act referred to.. Purchasers of property are thereby enabled to ascertain, at the office of the custodian of the records, everything necessary to protect themselves in respect to titles, save such facts as may be hidden in old dockets, scattered about the country, or carried away to distant lands by emigrating justices-*335of the peace. This >evil was one deserving the attention of the Legislature, and it is the duty of the courts to uphold their action unless they have clearly transcended their power.

A similar act of the Legislature was .passed in Tennessee, and it was provided that where a justices’ docket was deposited with the clerk of the county court on the death or removal of the justice, the execution should be issued by the clerk, returnable to himself. It was also provided that the clerk might issue a scire facias or a judgment to revive the same, making the scire facias returnable before himself as county clerk. The Supreme Court held that it was error for the clerk to make the writ returnable before the county court, and the statute referred to was. treated by the court as a valid act. See White vs. Davenport, 7 Yerger, 475.

Similar statutes in regard to docketing justices’ judgments, and issuing execution thereon by the clerk of courts of record, exist in nearly all the States. The Constitution of Nevada contains a provision restricting the jurisdiction of the district courts in language precisely like that in this State in the particular in question; and her Legislature passed at its earliest session an act in relation to justices’ courts and judgments in terms closely identical with the act in question under which the practice here mentioned has never been challenged before the courts, so far as can be ascertained by a careful examination of all her reports. Const, of Nevada, Art. YI„ Sec. 6 ; Compiled Laws of Nevada, p. 441, §557.

Even if it be true that a judgment of a justice of the peace cannot become a judgment of the Circuit Court by the filing of a transcript of the judgment with the clerk, and his entry thereof in the book containing judgments of the Circuit Court, by reason of the constitutional jurisdiction of the latter, yet the statute is not vitiated if, by disregarding its objectional features, it will still stand independent of the unconstitutional portions, even if such portions are contained *336in the same section. See Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, ch. 7, pp. 177-8, and numerous authorities cited.

ISTo other question than that we have here treated is raised by the assignment of errors, and the result is that the Circuit Court was right in refusing to set aside the execution.

The question suggests itself whether, if the judgment of a justice of the peace docketed in pursuance of the statute is not a judgment of the Circuit Court, that court has any power to entertain the motion of the appellant to set aside the execution. If it is not an execution issued upon a judgment of the Circuit Court, then the statute (Th. Dig., 360,) does not apply, and that court would probably have no power to control the writ as its own process. The judgment having been docketed, the justice does not issue the execution, and it may not be within his power to control it by a proceeding of this character. The result would be that if such execution was illegally issued by the clerk, the parties would be left to their remedy by such action at law or in equity as might be proper when a right of action shall have accrued.

The proper order in this case is to dismiss the appeal. Ordered accordingly.