(dissenting):
An action was brought by the Pinnacle Coal Company against the Norfolk & Western Railroad Company before a justice of Mercer county to recover for overcharge for carriage of coal from Bramwell to Bluefield, a distance of thirteen miles, and j udgment was rendered for plaintiff for eleven dollars and sixty-seven cents and costs, and then the defendant applied to the circuit coui't for a writ of prohibition to prohibit the justice from carrying the judgment into execution, and, a rule having issued to show cause why such prohibition should not be awarded, upon demurrer to the petition and motion to dischai'ge the rule, the rule was discharged, thus refusing the writ of prohibition. The rig-ht of plaintiff to recover depends upon whether the rate of charge on coal is to be under subsection 8, s. 82c, c. 54, p. 562, Code 1891, or under section 2, chapter 17, Acts 1895; and that depends on the question whether the act of 1895 repeals said Code provision as to freight charge. I regard it as a question of repeal hy implication, although counsel argues that it is not, but is an express repeal, because the later act contains the clause, *581“All acts and parts of acts which conflict with any of the provisions of this act are hereby-repealed;” but as, to apply this clause, we must first determine that the prior act does conflict with the later, such conflict would work a repeal by implication under general principles of construction without that clause. The inconsistency between the acts must be clear, so that the two cannot each be executed, to work repeal by implication. Sturm v. Fleming, 31 W. Va. 701, (8 S. E. 363).
The subjects covered by the Code are the classification of the various articles of freight and the charges thereon, and these are the subjects dealt with by the act of 1895, and therefore the matter seems to fall under the doctrine referred to in State v. Mines, 38 W. Va. 126, (18 S. E. 470), that “a subsequent statute, revising the whole subject-matter oí a former one, and evidently intended as a substitute for it, though it contains no express words to that effect, must, on principles of law as well as reason and common sense, operate a repeal of the former law.” See Totten v. Nighbert, 41 W. Va. 801, (24 S. E. 627); Red Rock v. Henry, 106 U. S. 596, (1 Sup. Ct. 434). I repeat that these two laws make full and ample provision upon two subjects, and the only two they deal with,- — that is, classification for the purpose of charge for transportation of all articles of freight, and the rates of such charge. Said subsection 7, s. 82c, c. 54, of the Code, says that “goods, merchandise, and all other kinds of property shall be classified, for the purpose of transportation, as follows;” then enumerating a large number of articles in various classes, and providing for unenumerated articles, plainly covering all articles transportable. The act of 1895 is just as wide, as it commands “a general classification of goods, merchandise, and all other kinds of property for the purpose of transpoi'tation.” Now, turn to the subject of charges. The Code, in subsection 8, says that a.ll railroad corporations, according to the classification in subsection 7, shall be limited to certain charges, covering the whole field of charge. The act of 1895, in section 2, does the same, providing for a tariff of rates on all the articles classified under section 1. Therefore I repeat that both statutes deal with, and contain complete provision for, *582classification and charges on all sixbjects capable of transportation, and thus the rule of law above specified applies. Are these acts inconsistent with each other? They are irreconcilably so. Both provide for classification, but while the Code itself made that classification, the act of 1895, while likewise requiring- a classification, says the railroad company or other carrier shall make it, but so make it as to conform to the classification in g-eneral use on that railroad for interstate transportation under the act of congress known as the interstate commerce act of February 4, 1887. This was done to harmonize the classification of articles of transportation within this State with the classification used on the same road for freight shipped from points in this State to points in other states, or from other states to points in this. Thus, the act of 1895 does not itself make a classification, whereas the Code did.
Next, as to charges. The Code itself fixes a maximum rate per ton per mile, varying according to distance by sections of fifty miles, the charge diminishing for each fifty miles of transportation, and varying also with classification, articles in one of the several classifications being inflexibly charged a different rate from those in another classification. The act of 1895 requires the road to be cut up into sections of ten miles, contemplating that rates may be made to vary according to distance. The rates are to be fixed by the company; and this act does not, like the Code, say just what rates shall be charged, only saying that the average rate for all classes of freight under the classification directed by the act shall not exceed five cents per ton per mile, except that coal and some other articles named shall not exceed three cents. Thus different rates from those inflexibly fixed by the Code itself may be-charged on the same articles. ' Thus the classification under the two ac-ts may be different, articles under one class in the Code falling in another under the later act; and the length of sections measuring the charge are actually different, and the charges may be different. They cannot both co-exist and be executed without jar and confusion. The act of 1895 plainly repeals and takes the place of said Code provision as to classification of articles of freight and the charges. The justice applied the wrong *583law to the case before him, and gaye a judgment unwarranted by law. It was error of law.
But does prohibition lie to prohibit the enforcement of this judgment? I think not. It is urged that no appeal lies, nor certiorari, and, if prohibition is not granted, there is no redress. That is so. The law says that, unless the amount in controversy, exclusive of interest and costs, exceeds fifteen dollars, no appeal shall lie. The law thus says that public policy demands the close of litigation with the first judgment in small matters, no matter how gross the error. In such case, we do not look at the degree of error in the judgment. The legislature has in this instance applied the maxim, “De minimis non curat lex'’’ (concerning- very small things the law has no care). Counsel endeavors to bring- the case under the old rule that prohibition lies where the inferior court has no jurisdiction, and bases this position on the theory that the action was a statutory one, and the statute to sustain it had been repealed. The action was not statutory. It was in nature an action of assumpsit for money had and received, an action to recover money. True, the statute fixed the rate of charge, and for excessive charge gave action, and, if there had been no statute to fix charges, there would be no action. In no other sense is it a statutory action. If there had been no statute fixing rate, and yet an action had been brought for overcharge, you would not say it was a statutory action. It would simply be a common-law action for the recovery of money on insufficient ground to warrant judgment. So the repeal of the statute made the action, in nature, just such an action. I do not see how it can be said, when a man brings a suit in any court basing his claim on a statute claimed by him to be in force, in a court which would have jurisdiction if it were still in force, and it is finally decided that the law was. repealed, that the court proceeded without jurisdiction. It proceeded without valid cause of action, but within its jurisdiction. Who would say that in Curran v. Owens, 15 W. Va. 208, an action by a wife to recover damages for the sale of liquor to her husband, the circuit court had no jurisdiction because of the repeal of the statute on which alone the action rested? The question of *584a repeal of a law is a nice question of law oftentimes; and if, when held to have been repealed, the whole thing is void because of want of jurisdiction, vital principles would be reversed. You may as well say that when an action is based on the existence of a fact, and it is disproven, there is no jurisdiction. So where the action is predicated upon the supposed continued existence of a statute or rule of law decided by the court in the end not to exist. There is jurisdiction nevertheless. The contention of counsel fails to discriminate between want of jurisdiction and want of cause of action.
It has been often laid down that no prohibition lies as for want of jurisdiction, if the court has jurisdiction of cases of the same general nature, unless it abuses its jurisdiction by exceeding its legitimate powers. Mere error or irregularity .of the court in its rulings, as holding there is cause of action to sustain a judgment when there is not, will not call for prohibition, but it must be redressed by appeal or writ of error. County Court v. Boreman, 34 W. Va. 362, (12 S. E. 490); Fleming v. Commissioners, 31 W. Va. 608, (8 S. E, 267). In this connection I put the proposition that, as prohibition does not lie where an appeal will lie, and as, if this judg-ment had been fifteen dollars, an appeal would lie, so, as it is less, it does not lie; in other words, the nature of the question as to the application of the writ of prohibition is the same where the judgment is under as where it is over the amount of fifteen dollars. The amount does not give character to the judgment.
The railroad’s counsel would also put the right to prohibition on section 1, chapter 110, Code, giving prohibition both where the court has no jurisdiction and where, having jurisdiction, “it exceeds its legitimate power.” I think this latter clause does not enlarg'e the scope of the writ, and is only declaratory of the common-law office of the writ. This clause that the writ lies where the court “exceeds its legitimate power” cannot be used to extend the writ to every case of mere error. It must amount to an abuse or usm--pation of power, where the court, in exercising lawful jurisdiction, does some collateral act, which under no circumstances it could do; not where it simply mistakes abad fora good cause of action in law. Notice that the section does *585not merely gire the writ where the court “exceeds its legitimate powers,” but tells what it means by exceeding its powers, saying that the excess must amount to “usurpation and abuse of power,” as it opens by giving the writ in cases of “usurpation of power” in those instances where there is no jurisdiction at all, or where, if there is, the court exceeds its power so far that there is no color of law for it, but it amounts to “usurpation or abuse of power.” It is important to note those words when construing the words “exceeds its legitimate powers.” I see that as far back as Blackstone the law gave prohibition, not only where the court had no jurisdiction to entertain a case at all, but that “if, in handling matters clearly within their cognizence, they transgress the bounds prescribed to them by the laws of England,” the writ lay. 3 Bl. Comm. 112. This was the law before our act. 19 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 263. Note that the Code says, “exceeds its legitimate powers,” meaning doing some act outside the court’s power as set by law, which under no color of law pertinent to the lawful exercise of its just power it could do; something not colorably sheltered by its powers in the case, but beyond them, so that it is as if there were no jurisdiction at all. Now, mere misjudgment in a case is not an excess of legitimate power. The mistaken decision as to the validity of cause of action is not only not an act done in excess of legitimate power, but clearly within it; for the law commands the court or justice to say whether the cause of action is in law good or bad. High, Extr. Rem. § 767, says: “It is never allowed except in cases of usurpation or abuse of power. * * * In other words, the remedy is employed only to restrain courts from acting in excess of their powers, and, if their proceedings are within the limits of their jurisdiction, prohibition will not lie. If, therefore, the inferior court has jurisdiction of the subject-matter, a mistaken exercise of that jurisdiction or of its acknowledged powers will not justify a resor.t to the extraordinary remedy by prohibition.” In section 767a, High says: “The nature of the action” is the test. “If the action is of such a nature as to fall within the jurisdiction of an inferior court, prohibition will not lie merely because of insufficiency in the statement of the cause of *586the action in the pleadings, or because of insufficient proof to maintain the cause of action as stated.” That is just this case. The justice was bound to decide whether there was in law sufficient cause of action to give judgment; in fact, he could not possibly exercise his plain jurisdiction without deciding that matter; and to say that in so deciding he “exceeded” his “legitimate powers” is utterly untenable. He did just that which the law commanded him to do, — decided the case, doing nothing outside his powers. He only erred. Buskirk v. Judge, 7 W. Va. 91, upholds this doctrine, saying: “Prohibition can only be interposed in a clear case of excess of jurisdiction on the part of some inferior tribunal. Where the matter is clearly within the jurisdiction of the inferior court, a mere error in the proceedings may be ground of appeal or review, but not prohibition.” In McConiha Guthrie, 21 W. Va. 134, decided under this act now cited to sustain this application, the doctrine is held that there must be in the proceedings something done which “clearly exceeds its legitimate powers in some collateral matter arising in the cause over which it has no authority; but, unless it has so exceeded its authority, on application for such wi'it, the court will not inquire whether it decided right or wrong.” It further says: “The inferior court has right and authority to determine whether or not it has acquired jurisdiction” of the particular case, “and any error committed in that regard will not be in excess or abuse of its jurisdiction, but an error in adjudicating a matter within its legitimate authority.” I do not see that the McConiha Case, or any of the cases since the enactment in 1881 of the act in question, tend to stretch the writ of prohibition to what is really nothing but mere error or irregularity. Frequent are the applications to this and other courts to do so, and I have said so much on the subject for that reason, though well I know the subject has been hitherto fully discussed. In McConiha v. Guthrie a prohibition was allowed where there was jurisdiction, but the court was condemning land which the lawT prohibited, and it was adjudged an act in excess of authority, and placed on that ground. In Wilkinson v. Hoke, 39 W. Va. 403, (19 S. E. 520), the circuit court rendered a judgment where the *587statute prohibited, and it was held to be acting1 in excess of its legitimate power, which is given as the ground of decision. The defendant company seeks by prohibition to reverse a recovery so small that statute law in Code, c. 50, s. 163, and chapter 110, section 2, enacts that it shall be final and irreversible even though wrong; but we cannot allow this. In my judgment, the decision in this case takes from the justices’ courts a jurisdiction plainly given by the Constitution to entertain an action of assumpsit for money overcharged by a railroad for freight. So a circuit court would not have jurisdiction. This decision says there must be a status to give justices power to fix railroad rates. The Constitution and statute already give the power, not to “fix” in the first instance, but to decide whether those charged in a given instance are unlawful.
Reversed.