Royal Insurance v. Rufer's Adm'r

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion oe the cóijrt.

The only question necessary to be decided in this case is, should the clerk or the judge of the court below. have transferred this case to the Louisville Law and Equity Court?

When the case was called for trial the regular judge declined to preside in the case, and this court must assume for reasons that were sufficient to require him to leave the bench. A special judge was then elected and the case tried, resulting in the verdict and judgment complained of. It is insisted by the appellant that the special judge had no power to try the case, and that the proceeding under which the election was held having been objected to, the; judgment below should be reversed. We find, on an examination of the various acts regulating the proceedings in the courts of Jefferson county and the city of Louisville, that it is only where the judge fails to attend his court that the members of the bar can elect. The act of February 7, 1884, provides: “That when the Judge of the Jefferson Court ■ of Common Pleas, or the Chancellor of the Louisville Chancery Court, or Vice-Chancellor of. the Louisville Chancery Court, shall fail to attend, it shall be lawful for the members of the bar in attendance on such. *521court to elect a special judge to hold such court for the occasion, in the same manner as special judge» for circuit courts are elected.”

It is evident that the Legislature saw the necessity of an election of a special judge where the regular judge could not attend, for the reason that it would delay the trial of all the cases ready to be disposed of, and that some one should be substituted other. than the chancellor or vice-chancellor, whose courts are in session at the same time. Therefore, the election of a special judge was authorized. If, however, the regular judge does attend, and can not properly preside in a particular case, what action is then required to be taken? The second section of the same act provides: “When the Judge of the Jefferson Court of Common Pleas can not properly preside in an action or special proceeding pending before him, such action or special proceeding shall be transferred by the clerk of said court, or the judge thereof, to the Vice-Chancellor of the Louisville Chancery Court, and all further steps and proceedings in such action or special proceeding shall be had before said vice-chancellor ; and if, for any cause, the vice-chancellor can not properly preside in such action or special proceeding, the same shall be transferred to the Jefferson Circuit Court, and there tried.”

The third section of the act provides that when the Chancellor of the Louisville Chancery Court can not properly preside in an action before him, it shall be transferred to the vice-chancellor, and if he can not preside, a special judge may be chosen as they are in the circuit courts. Section 4 provides that when the *522vice-chancellor can not preside in an ordinary action before him, he shall transfer it to the Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, and if that judge can not preside, it shall be transferred to the circuit court. Section six provides that when the vice-chancellor can not properly preside in an equitable action before him, it shall be transferred to the chancellor, and if he can not preside, a .special judge may be chosen.

It is, therefore, apparent from the legislation in regard to the courts in Louisville and Jefferson county, that the right to elect a special judge in either of the courts mentioned is determined by the statute on the subject, and that special judges can not be elected unless the judge or judges of the courts to which the transfers are directed to be made can not properly preside. It was the duty, therefore, of the regular judge, without leaving the bench, to. transfer this case to the Law and Equity Court, or, if he failed to do so, it became the duty of the clerk to make the transfer, and to so enter it upon the order-book.

The appellant objected to the holding of the election and to the election of the special judge. The regular judge had left the bench, and the statute requiring the, clerk to make the transfer, and the clerk persisting in holding the election over its objection, and the order so showing that attempted to confer jurisdiction on the special judge, it was not necessary, when that judge took his seat, to make a motion to transfer, or to object to his hearing the case. He had no power, over such objections, to try it. If no objection had been made to the proceeding, neither party would be allowed to complain of *523the judgment, because they had the right to consent that a special judge or an attorney should try the case; and this court, in the absence of an objection, would necessarily assume that the trial was had' by the consent of parties. The fact that the name of the vice-chancellor’s court has been changed to that of the Louisville Law and Equity Court can make no difference. The same law or statute applies to that court that applied to the vice-chancellor’s court.

It is said by counsel for the appellee that the act in question authorizing the transfer is in violation of section 28 of article 4 of the Constitution, which provides: “The General Assembly shall provide by law for holding circuit courts when, for any cause, the ^judge shall fail to attend, or, if in attendance, can not properly preside.” We are unable to see the application of the constitutional question to the case before us. The common pleas court is, a statutory court, having similar jurisdiction in many respects to the circuit court, and was created in aid of that court to relieve it of a docket that imposed too much labor upon its presiding judge, and it may be termed a circuit court for that reason, but at the same time may be abolished at the will and pleasure of the Legislature without regard to its duration as fixed by the law creating it or the judge presiding over it. It is the .creature of the Legislature, and its jurisdiction, connected with the filing, trial and transfer of cases brought within that court, may be regulated by the law-making power, if not in violation of the Constitution. In fact, if this question was confined to the •circuit court, we perceive no constitutional objection *524to the transfer of civil cases from that to another court if the Legislature should deem it expedient. The provision of the Constitution requiring the .Legislature to provide by law for holding courts when the regular judge fails to attend or can not properly preside does not interfere with the right of the Legislature to change the venue in a civil case, or to transfer a particular case from one court to another,, or even any number of civil cases, to that court organized to relieve the circuit court, and invested by the Legislature with the jurisdiction. Such is both, the legislative and judicial history of the State.

The election of a special judge being without authority of law, it was not necessary to move to transfer the case after the special judge had taken his. seat, and the fact that he may have given to the appellant a fair trial can not vest in him the power to try the case.. The order of court shows that the defendant objected to the selection of a judge on the-ground that the case should be transferred to the Law and Equity Court, and that when the special judge-was elected and took his seat, the defendant objected at the time, and the clerk overruled his objections. The statute is imperative that the judge of the court or the clerk shall make the transfer, and the judge-failing to do so, the clerk should have entered the-order.

Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. The Judge of the Common Pleas Court will transfer the case, if he-is unwilling to preside, to the Law and Equity Court-