State v. Judge of the First District

Simon,- J.

delivered the opinion of the court on this application.

This case is brought before us on a rule obtained by the defendants, requiring the judge of the district court, the sheriff *176and the plaintiff, to show cause, why a writ of prohibition should not issue. The applicants represent, that on the 19th of April, 1841, a final judgment was rendered against them in the district court of the first judicial district in favor of the plaintiff; that on the 28th of the same month they presented their petition of appeal, and gave bond and security according to law, to operate a stay of execution, and that notwithstanding said appeal so taken, plaintiff has been permitted by the district court to take out execution against them, on the judgment appealed from, which execution is now in the hands of the sheriff of said court.

It appears from the record, that on the 28th of April, 1841, a printed appeal bond, containing several blanks, was filed by the appellants, after having been signed by them and their security ; that when said bond was filed, the sum of $1000 was filled up in the blank as the amount thereof, and that all the other blanks in the bond, including the name of the appellee, were not filled up until the 28th of May following, when they were so filled Up by the clerk of the district court, with whom the bond ,had been left by the appellants, at which time the transcript of the record for the supreme court was completed, including the appeal bond. In the mean time, the appellee obtained from the court below a rule on the appellants, to show cause, why the appeal should riot be dismissed on the grounds, that no appeal bond had been executed according to law, and that the security tendered in the instrument, purporting to be an appeal bond, was insufficient. This rule was discharged by the district judge, without prejudicing the rights of the plain* tiff to issue execution.

The lower judge has shown for cause: 1. That the petition filed herein is not sworn to according to law. Code of Pract, art. 848, and French text.

2. That if there is any ground for prohibition, under the allegations of the petition, said writ should not issue against the undersigned, but against the party prosecuting the execution, and the sheriff of the district court. C. Pr. 850, 853.

Anoathisnot petition1 for a 'yrlt °f ProhMtion, if the truth of the facts stat-from an intspee-cord-'and^pro-had in

3. That the petition shows no legal ground for the writ of prohibition.

4. That the petitioner has mistaken his remedy, which was by injunction or appeal.

The appellee and the sheriff have not answered, but their counsel having agreed to adopt the answers of the judge as their own, we shall proceed to examine the above grounds relied on by them, in the order in which they have been set up ; after having bestowed on the questions therein presented, all the attention which their importance requires.

I. The article 848 of the Code of Practice provides, that “ the court, to which this petition (for a writ of prohibition) is offered, shall require the oath of the petitioner to the truth of the facts stated in it, unless these facts be proved by the mere L J examination of the prayer or of the proceedings which took place before the inferior court.” In French it says : “ La cour devra éxiger le serment du pétitionnaire, at d moins que ces faits ne soient prouvés par Vinspection seule, §-c.” It does not appear to us, that it was necessary in this case to require the oath of the petitioner, as the facts, on which the application is made, are sufficiently proved by an inspection of the record of the proceedings had before the inferior court. We understand the law to mean, that we should require the allegations contained in the petition to be sworn to, only in case of our not being satisfied of their existence, after an examination of the prayer or of the proceedings, and that such an oath •is not to be taken, unless we require it. C. of Pr. 849.

II. It is true, that the inferior judge has nothing to do with the issuing of the execution of a judgment; this proceeding generally takes place at the request of the party who instructs the clerk accordingly, and when put in the hands of the sheriff, it is carried into effect without the interference or interposition of the judge ; but in this case, the execution was issued in consequence of a special order of the court, that the appeal should not operate as a suspensive one, the rule being discharged, without prejudicing the rights of the plaintiff to *178issue his execution. Then the question presents itself: was f]ip app0aj SUSpongive, or merely devolutive 1 If suspensive* we have often and very lately decided again, that the lower court has no longer any jurisdiction in the cause, until the case having been disposed of by the appellate court, its mandate -is returned below for execution; and consequently, the inferior judge had no power to order an execution to issue. 4 La. Rep., p. 205; 15 Idem, 391; and the case of D. T. Walden vs. City Bank, ante, 167,. If devolutive, the appellee was at liberty to take out his execution, without any necessity of applying to the district judge for that purpose. In such a case however, we understand from the art. 853 of the Code of Practice, that if, on an application made to this court for a writ of prohibition, it were to be shown, that the execution issued illegally and unadvisedly in a cause, where the inferior court had no jurisdiction, that is to say: because it had been deprived of further jurisdiction by a suspensive appeal, a writ of prohibition could then properly issue, directed as well to the party proceeding as to the officer charged with the execution, without any reference to the judge who rendered the judgment. But, in the present case, the execution was issued by the party after having obtained the action or opinion of the district judge on the legality of this proceeding, after the appeal had been granted, and the bond and security furnished, and it seems to us, that if it be established, that the appeal taken by the applicants ought to operate as a suspensive one, our mandate should as well be directed to the district judge, who would be thus found ..... . to have exceeded the bounds of his jurisdiction as to the plaintiff atld the officer-

"Wlicre by error of the ief!seing to give to the appeal the effect of a sus-pensive one, by authorising an execution to issue, after being divested ofjuris-ofprohibitionis the proper remedy to correct such error.

We are not rea¿y to deny to the district court the power of j j x trying, on motion, the sufficiency of the security furnished on ‘ the appeal bond ; indeed, this was not controverted and was . . , , , , even indirectly recognized as the proper course to be pursued, *n case xePorted 13 La. Rep. 574; but we think, that if an error be committed by the court below, by refusing to give to . . . the appeal the effect of a suspensive one, and by authorizing-*179an execution to issue after becoming divested of jurisdiction, the proper remedy to correct such error, ought to be by a writ of prohibition under the provisions of our laws.

a blank appeal bond is binding 0n them, and Stewards**5 'to operate as a sus- When a sus-Efoncf? granted! aceordfn°dyfthe °{¡ is at end, alter security is food,

III. The petition and the record show, that the appellants 1, . . . . had caused their security to sign a printed appeal bond, one of the blanks of which was filled up at the time with the amount fixed by the judge, and that said bond was filed with the clerk within the ten days allowed by law. In „our opinion, this bond was sufficient to bind the security. In the case of Breedlove vs. Johnston, 2 Martin, N. S., 517, this court held in substance, that the obligor who gives his signature in blank, is bound by the obligation which may be written above it; in the present . , . , ... case, as m the one just quoted, it is clear that the security left his signature with the proper officer, for the purpose of filling up over it, the blanks of an instrument, which was to be used as an appeal bond; he intended to be bound in the sum of one thousand dollars, and we cannot see any good reason, why he should not be held responsible in the manner, in which he consented to bind himself. This bond then was sufficient to make the appeal suspensive; and if so, the jurisdiction of the district court being suspended, the judge, after finding that the security was good and solvent, 'could not legally take any further step in the cause, by ordering an execution to issue ; the plaintiff was precluded from taking it out, and the sheriff from carrying it into effect. We think therefore, that the grounds set forth in the applicants’ petition are sufficiently legal for obtaining a writ of prohibition.

IV. It has been strenuously urged that the appellants have mistaken their remedy which was by injunction or by appeal; and we must confess that our opinion was, in a great extent, shaken by the plausibility of the able and ingenious arguments of the district judge who appeared before us in propria persona; but on a closer examination of the subject, we have not been able to come to a different conclusion. This court has repeatedly disclaimed a general superintending control over the inferior jurisdictions, and when called atpon to exercise *180any of those powers incident to our appellate jurisdiction, in cases which (j0 not come before us directly by appeal, we have ajwayS required a strong case to be shown, and have generally felt the greatest reluctance in ordering the issuing of those writs which have mainly and particularly for their object the restraining or limiting of the inferior courts in the exercise of their legal and constitutional jurisdiction. Such are the views of this court as expressed in the case of the State vs. Judge Bermudez, reported in 14 La. Rep., 481; but, after mature deliberation, it has appeared to us that the circumstances of the present case are so clearly within the meaning of the articles 845 to 854 of the Code of Practice, that the remedy therein allowed seems to have been provided for, for the very purpose, among others, of preventing the injury complained of by the applicants. Indeed, the matter in controversy before us presents no other issue between the parties, but a mere question of legal requisites : Was the law allowing a party a suspensive appeal complied with or not? The solution of this question is a matter connected with our appellate jurisdiction, and has a tendency to aid it or to make it effectual; if so we must conceive ourselves authorized and. even bound to interfere with the proceedings of the lower court, and to afford the party complaining that protection which will secure to him the free exercise and ulterior benefit of his right of appeal; this object would not be attained by an injunction or by a second appeal, as it would be imposing on the appellants, who would be bound to furnish further security, in both cases, such additional conditions as have never been in the contemplation of our laws. If the applicants, from a strict compliance with the requisites of the law, are entitled to a suspensive appeal, they must enjoy the right of bringing it before us without being subjected to the risk of sustaining an irreparable injury or to the inconvenience and difficulty of instituting a new suit and of procuring additional security.

It has also been insisted that the object and effect of the writ of prohibition is to preclude the lower court forever from acting *181or entertaining jurisdiction in á cause: It may be so in some cases, but under our laws, we think that a writ of prohibition 'may also properly issue to suspend the action of an inferior tribunal during a certain length of time, and until it can legally resume the exercise of its former jurisdiction. Prohibition is defined to be “the name of a writ issued by a superior court directed to the judge and parties of a suit in an inferior court, commanding them to cease from the prosecution of the same, upon a suggestion that the cause originally, or from some collateral matter arising therein, does not belong to that jurisdiction, but to the cognizance of some other court.” Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, verbo, prohibition; 3 Blackstone, 112. In the case of an appeal, it is clear that the jurisdiction of the lower court is provisionally suspended, and that the judge cannot take cognizance 'of any proceeding in the cause, until the return of the mandate of this court; and if, during the pendency of the appeal it becomes necessary, from some collateral matter arising in the cause in the inferior tribunal, to issue a writ of prohibition, such writ, which, although called prohibition, is really in the nature of the common law, writ of supersedeas, will cease to have its effect after the cause is either sent back for a new trial or remanded for execution of the judgment. *

A writ of prohibition may issue to suspend the action of an inferior tribunal for a time, and until it legally resume the exercise of its former jurisdiction.

We are therefore of opinion that the application of the appellants ought to be sustained, and that a writ of prohibition should issue directed to the judge a quo, to the appellee and to the sheriff.

Our learned brother of the District Court has endeavored, in his arguments, to controvert the opinion of this court lately delivered in the case of D. T. Walden vs. the City Bank, 17 La. Rep. 511. tie has attempted to convince us that the remedy in that case was by appeal only, and not by a writ of prohibi-tionthat our decision was inconsistent with our first decree in the same cause : ante 167—and that we had assumed original jurisdiction in a manner contrary to the constitution of the State.

We have already expressed our views with regard to the *182remedy by appeal; we hare shown the inconvenience and dijfficulty with which it would be attended, and in the case alluded to, this remedy would have proved not only insufficient, 'but entirely unavoidable. Indeed, what would have been . , . , . - , the course pursued on an appeal from the order ot seizure and sale in question? Forsooth, that the case would have been brought before us without any other issue and evidence but the petition and the documents thereto annexed; nothing else could have been shown before this court but the errors, if any, apparent on the face of the record, and the appellant, unable to put before us the real condition of his case, would thus be deprived of the relief which the law allows him to prevent the inferior judge from exceeding the bounds of his jurisdiction, and for the preservation of his legal rights under the previous appeals; for this purpose, it was necessary for him to show that a former appeal was pending from, a judgment refusing the same order of seizure and sale ; that an appeal was also pending from a judgment dissolving a writ of injunction originally granted to prevent the issuing of the order, and that the lower court had transcended its authority and jurisdiction by disregarding the three appeals, and ordering a writ of seizure and sale to issue, whilst ah proceedings were suspended by the injunction. Without the evidence of these facts, the remedy resorted to by an appeal from the order of seizure and sale, would have been wholly ineffectual and nugatory. We are still of opinion that ... , the District judge could not grant an order of seizure and sale after an appeal had been taken from his refusal to issue the same order previously applied for; that he had no right to re-sc^n(^ a former judgment in a case which was pending before the appellate court, and that the proper remedy to arrest his 1 , ........ J proceedings was by a writ of prohibition.

The judge of an inferior court cannot ¡p-ant an and sale, after ken?romVis re-‘theíarae order previously applied for. But if he does, the to^arrest^his liyamdt'ofpro-luhition.

R has been also contended that our first decree in the case of Walden vs. the City Bank, is inconsistent with the second": the former was rendered under very different circumstances ; the application there was made for the purpose of preventing the District judge from trying a cause on its merits, whilst an *183appeal was pending from an interlocutory judgment dissolving , r, . . . . . , , a writ of injunction. We said that the judgment upon the dissolving the injunction, far from being upon the merits was upon a matter purely incidental, that the appeal therefrom did c 1 J .... . not divest the court a qua of jurisdiction, since there was no final judgment, and that it was clear that as a final judgment remained yet to he pronounced after a trial on the merits quite independently of any decision which might he rendered on the previous appeal, no writ of prohibition could issue to arrest the proceedings complained of. We are unable to perceive any inconsistency between the two decisions, which, on being confronted, will clearly appear to be predicated on very distinct and different questions.

The aufllor;t}r STant writs of prohibition, is considered, in constitution, 6 Sstourtappel-la<? juriadl.0tl0“ only, and is to he confined to matters, -which have a tendency

But it has been maintained that by granting the writ of prohibition sub modo, and by requiring the applicant to furnish a bond with security for seventy-five thousand dollars, for the purposes set forth in our decision, our decree was a violation of the constitution of the State. The writ of prohibition, the power to grant which, is specially allowed by the code of practice to appellate courts of competent jurisdicion, is not a writ of right; it is within the sound discretion of the tribunal to which the application is made, and the party who resorts to it, is hound to establish such facts as to convince the appellate court that the remedy applied for is necessary, not only for the protection of the legal rights of the party, hut also and principally for the constitutional exercise of our appellate jurisdiction. We understand therefore that the authority thus granted, being- ...... ... ° sidered in relation to the constitution which allows to this court appellate jurisdiction only, is to he confined to matters which have a tendency to aid that jurisdiction, and that the issuing of the writ of prohibition, under the circumstances shown, may he 1 J constitutionally ordered upon such conditions as, in our legal ... ... . , ° discretion, we may think proper to impose on the applicant for the protection and benefit of his adversary, the exercise of whose rights, during the appeal, is to be suspended by such, writ. In the case in question, the relief sought for, among *184other objects, was to give effect to a writ of injunction which, having been granted by the lower court, had been subsequently dissolved, and was pending before us on a suspensive appeal. We said that the injunction was revived and continued in force by the appeal, that it was not in the power of the inferior judge to destroy its effect, as long as the matter in controversy remained undetermined in this court; and that therefore his proceedings should be arrested. But in exercising this discretionary authority, for the purpose of aiding our jurisdiction, we thought that it was also necessary to secure the other party against the injurious consequences which might result from the keeping in force of the injunction during the pendency of the appeal. This was not prejudging the ultimate decision of the cause ; this was not declaring that the injunction was legally and rightfully granted and sued out in the court below, and properly kept in force in the. appellate court; this cannot he considered as granting a new injunction and as being thereby an undue assumption of original jurisdiction; the injunction already existed, its effect after the appeal had been disregarded by the lower court, and in accordance with our former opinion, we still think that, in order to reinstate it by a writ of prohibition, and to preserve to the appellant the ulterior benefit of his appeal, we had the power, iri the exercise of our sound legal discretion, to require of him that he should furnish additional security against the consequences of the provisional effect of the injunction before the appellate court..

It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the rule be made absolute.