delivered the opinion of the Court:
1. In the interest of good practice we deem it proper to notice with disapproval some irregularities that occur in the proceedings in the present case, all of which seem to have arisen from the erroneous frame of the petition for the writ of certiorari.
The caption of that petition implies that the proceeding is one between Chamberlain and Edmonds. The title is "Frank H. Edmonds v. Joseph B. Chamberlain”; and it has been very naturally assumed by Chamberlain and his attorney that Chamberlain is a party respondent to the petition, and as such entitled in his own name to appear and answer it. On the contrary, in contemplation of law, and by the very terms of the petition itself, the justice of the peace is the sole respondent to it, and the only person required or entitled to make return thereto. It is very true that the person substantially interested is not the justice of the peace, but the other party to the cause before the justice, and that upon him, and not upon the justice, is the burden oftentimes of preparing the return, and always, after the return, the burden of sustaining the propriety of the action of the jus*339tice. But the justice alone is competent to make the return to the writ, and he alone is the formal respondent to the petition; and it is by reason of the fact that he is a judicial •officer, necessarily assumed to be impartial between the parties, and because the return to be made is of the proceedings before him, that the verity attributable to the return is not usually allowed to be controverted by the introduction of oral evidence. It is, therefore, irregular and not to be sanctioned, that a party interested in the cause before the justice should be made a party respondent to the petition for the writ of certiorari to bring up the xecord of the proceedings before the justice; although it may be proper enough, in an appropriate case, for the justice to include in his return to the writ, the cause of such party so far as it has been made to appear to him. There may be cases in which certiorari will lie, in which it would be proper to make those persons who are interested on the record parties thereto; but with us, certiorari from a superior to an inferior tribunal to bring up the record of the latter for the purpose of ascertaining whether it is proceeding within its jurisdiction is not a proceeding in equity, but one at common law wherein it is not proper to join as defendants or respondents those who have different interests.
2. But even if it were proper to make the appellant Chamberlain a party to the petition for the writ of certiorari on the ground that he was a party to the proceedings before the justice of the peace, which it is sought to review, it was not proper to inject into the cause the several affidavits which we find in the record before us. This is not a cause to be tried upon affidavits; and these affidavits serve no useful purpose whatever. Affidavits may properly be incorporated into a petition, or made part thereof; and they may similarly be annexed to a return; but independent affidavits, which constitute no part either of the petition or the return, are improper in proceedings upon a writ of certioraH. There is here, it is true, some justification for the affidavit of the appellant Chamberlain, inasmuch as it purports to be an answer to the petition, and he was invited by the form of the *340petition; and the affidavit of the appellant’s attorney is annexed to the appellant’s answer as part of it; but there is-no ground for the introduction of the affidavit of the appellee’s attorney. We propose to disregard all these affidavits ; and we have the less hesitation in so doing, since the questions involved can be disposed of without any reference whatever to them. It is sufficient.for us to consider the petition and the return of the justice of the peace to the-writ, in order to determine the propriety of the order which was made thereon.
3. Proceeding to the merits of the case, we may express, the regret that the course of legislation in regard to the jurisdiction of justices of the peace and the tenor of judicial decision thereon, has tended to leave the whole subject in a somewhat anomalous and chaotic condition. Part of the-difficulty will no doubt be removed in the near future in consequence of the adoption of the new code of law for the-District of Columbia whereby it is provided, among other things, that after it goes into effect, there- shall be no more-, trials by jury before justices of the peace. And it is believed that, in other respects, questions like some of those now before us, may be obviated in the future and greater certainty secured in the administration of the law, by the exercise of the power given to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, by section 996 of the Revised Statutes, of the United States for this District, to “ make and establish rules of practice, and prepare and publish forms of pleadings, for bringing all forms of actions, and the trial, thereof, before justices of the peace.”
In view of the near approach of the time when trial by jury, or what is known as such, before justices of the peace-must cease, it would serve no good purpose now to attempt any elaborate inquiry into the function of such a body under the existing law. Suffice it to say that we do not find it to-be either the letter or the spirit of the existing law, that,, when a trial by jury is demanded before- a justice of the-peace, the jurisdiction of the justice -then absolutely ceases, except that he is, of course, to organize the jury, record its-*341verdict, and enter judgment upon such verdict. This is the theory of the appellee in the present case. But, while it is true that, when a jury has been demanded and organized before a justice of the peace, that body supersedes the justice in the trial of the issue joined between the parties, as the statute specifically provides and requires, yet it is quite plain from the statute itself that út was¡ not the intention of the law to give to a jury in the court of a justice of the peace any greater power or authority than appertained to a common-law jury in a court of general jurisdiction; and it is equally clear that it was not the intention of the law. wholly to oust the jurisdiction of the justice upon the empanneling of his jury, for his authority is expressly continued to receive the verdict, to enter judgment thereon, and to supervise the execution of such judgment. In other words, the cause is pending before the justice all the time; and the jury is only an instrumentality to determine the issue of ■fact which is evolved in the progress of such cause, which is precisely the same purpose which the common-law jury subserves in a court of the common law. While in the court of the justice of the peace — for we must regard it as a court, although of limited and inferior jurisdiction — there are no formal pleadings, and, therefore, no formal joinder of issue, yet the plain meaning of the provision of the statute that, after issue joined, a trial by jury may be demanded, is that the issue for which such trial is desired, is the same kind of issue, one merely of fact, that is tried by a common-law jury in a court of general jurisdiction. And if this be the function of the jury, and the whole function of the jury in the one case as in the other, it necessarily follows that the court of the justice of the peace, as a court, continues in the control of the cause, and that the cause is not terminated in any event either by the agreement of the jury or by its failure to agree. For the disagreement of the jury and its consequent discharge must be presumed to have been contemplated by the law, as well as its agreement and the rendition of a verdict.
It is no sufficient argument to say that the jurisdiction of *342the justice of the peace is purely statutory, that his jurisdiction is to be limited by the strict letter of the law, and that there is to be no intendment made in favor of his jurisdiction. This is all true, but it is not to the point. The question here is not one of jurisdiction, but of procedure. Under the statute there was here undoubtedly jurisdiction both of the subject-matter and of the parties. By the general provisions of the statute the justice of the peace is fully empowered to adjudicate the whole controversy. By a special provision of the statute a jury is authorized in a certain contingency to determine a certain issue in the cause. But the jury is neither expressly, nor by implication, nor by reasonable intendment of the law, given charge of the whole cause• and we think that it would be unwarranted judicial legislation to hold that it was the effect of the statute to give it such entire control of the case. When the law says that the justice of the peace shall have full and entire jurisdiction of a cause and be empowered to determine each and every issue in it, and then provides that, in a certain contingency, a jury shall be summoned to try issues of fact, it requires no relaxation of the most rigid rules of statutory construction to hold that the general jurisdiction of the justice remains, except to the extent and for the purpose merely to which it is remitted to the jury in the contingency contemplated. To hold otherwise would be to violate the very principle of strict 'construction contended for by the appellee, and to invest the jury with a jurisdiction not conferred upon it by the express terms of the statute, and for which there is no good ground, either in the policy of the statute itself or outside of it.
We have said that the question here was one of procedure,, not of jurisdiction. Now, every court, however inferior and limited, when acting within its jurisdiction, must be presumed to have the authority to take all reasonable and proper steps to give effect to such jurisdiction. Every court, for example, however limited, may make reasonable rules for the conduct of its business. If it is authorized to adjudicate causes, it must be presumed to have the authority to take the *343testimony of witnesses to aid in such! adjudication. This is not -an enlargement of jurisdiction by construction, but the establishment of a procedure to give effect to tbe jurisdiction.
Now, we know that, in a court of general jurisdiction, tbe effect of tbe disagreement and discharge of a jury is simply to leave tbe issues untried and undisposed of, and to remit the parties to tbe position which they occupied before tbe jury was empanneled. Tbe condition is as -though no jury bad been empanneled. Is there any good reason or any warrant of law for giving a greater effect, an effect destructive of tbe administration of justice, to tbe discharge of a jury, consequent upon disagreement, in tbe court of a justice of tbe peace? We find no such reason and no warrant of law for any such conclusion. On tbe contrary, if tbe theory of tbe appellee on this point were correct, it would follow that tbe justice of tbe peace bad no authority to discharge tbe jury, and that tbe jury might be regarded as yet an effective body to be recalled for tbe completion of its-duties. It would follow, in fact, tba-t there could be no discharge at -all of tbe jury until it bad agreed upon a verdict* But no more in tbe court of -a justice of tbe peace than in a. court of tbe common law of general jurisdiction — much less, in fact — would tbe civilization of our age tolerate tbe barbarous methods whereby juries were coerced into verdicts by their being kept together indefinitely until they should agree.
We are of opinion that, under tbe statute, it ivas within tbe province of tbe justice of tbe peace to discharge tbe jury in this case, when it became reasonably certain to him that it could not be brought to an agreement; and that tbe effect of such disagreement and of tbe consequent discharge of the jury, was not to terminate tbe cause and oust tbe jurisdiction of tbe justice, but simply to remit tbe parties to tbe position which they held before tbe jury was empanneled.
4. The next contention is that, even if tbe disagreement and discharge of the jury did not terminate tbe cause, tbe *344jurisdiction of the justice was lost by his failure to make any specific continuance of the cause to a day and time certain, which, it is claimed, operated as a discontinuance, and by the discharge of the defendant without day, which is assumed to have been the result of such discontinuance.
But what we have said with regard to the effect of the discharge of the jury is, also, to a certain extent, applicable to this proposition. By that discharge, as we have just held, the cause was left as it stood before the jury was empanneled, with an issue joined and a demand for a jury to try such issue. When the demand for a jury was filed, which was then the last step in the cause, it required no entry of a continuance to any day certain to keep the cause alive. It was not required that there should be any immediate action by the justice to comply with the demand. The cause would not have been abated, if it had been permitted to slumber indefinitely. Such would not have been the result in a court of general jurisdiction after issue joined, which of itself operates as a demand for a trial by jury. There is no entry of continuances now required in such cases, if there ever was. The condition is such that, in such case, either party may at any time, upon motion and notice, call up a cause, and put the instrumentalities in motion for its trial by a jury. Why should we apply any different rule in causes pending before a justice of the peace? And why should not the rules of procedure, dependent upon general principles of universal application, such as motion and notice, be as applicable in the court of a justice of the peace as in a court of general jurisdiction? Indeed, in the absence •of specific rules specifically authorized, we would be disposed to hold that the rules of procedure of courts of general jurisdiction are applicable, so far as circumstances will permit, in the courts of justices of the peace.
Proceedings before justices of the peace are intended to be simple and as free as possible from legal technicalities. There are no formal pleadings, no terms of court, no formal continuances, no rigid rules of procedure, such as are necessary in courts of general jurisdiction. As is well known, *345the purpose of the establishment of these inferior and limited tribunals is to facilitate the settlement of petty controversies, which are too small in amount or character to justify the intervention of the courts of general jurisdiction. Consequently they are authorized to proceed, not according to the rigid rules of the common law, but as the statute specifically enacts, “ according to law and the equity and right of the matter ”— words which have always been understood to require the administration of substantial justice in these tribunals without much reference to the technicalities of the law. The court of the justice of the peace is always open; it has no terms; and the law of continuances has not much application to it. It would require a very rigid application •of that law to the present case to procure a discontinuance of the cause. We do not think that it applies at all.
Moreover, it is to be remarked here that the appellee, in response to the notice served upon him, appeared in court •at the time set for the trial; and whether there is any question as to the propriety of calling up the cause by motion and notice or not, he was there in pursuance of the pendency •of the cause. It is true that he then and there objected to the jurisdiction of the justice and his authority to proceed in the cause, and claimed that it had been discontinued. But it would have been the safer and the better course for him to have proceeded with the cause and raised the question of jurisdiction and reserved it for the appellate court.
5. After the defendant had appeared before the justice of the peace and filed his objection to the jurisdiction, and this objection had been overruled, the justice'proceeded to try the cause on its merits, without the intervention of a jury, and he rendered judgment for the plaintiff. We think that in this he transcended his jurisdiction and acted without warrant of law.
There was at that time standing upon his docket a demand of the defendant for a trial by jury, which had not been -gratified; for, of course, the fruitless result of the trial which was had did not satisfy the demand. Nor did the objection to the jurisdiction, which was afterwards interposed and *346which, counsel for appellant seem to treat as a plea puis darrein continuance, have the effect of obliterating from the record the demand for a trial by jury. Even tested i>y the rigid rules of pleading, which we have said should not apply to causes before justices of the peace, this plea, if plea it can be called, amounted to no more than a suggestion that the occurrences in the cause subsequent to the demand for a jury, amounted to a discontinuance; and when it was overruled, it left the cause precisely as though it had not been interposed. It was not a substitute for any previous pleading; and it did not have the effect of withdrawing any previous pleading. It left standing the issue joined between the parties, and the demand for the trial of that issue by a jury. That demand was a continuing demand; and its disregard by the justice and his trial of the cause himself constituted an assumption of jurisdiction not warranted by law.
It is of no consequence in this connection that, upon the-overruling of the defendant’s objection to the jurisdiction, the defendant and his attorney left the court and did not return. Non constat that he might not have remained or would not have returned, if the trial by jury had been awarded to him, which he had demanded. "While he might have remained and reserved the question of jurisdiction, he was not bound to be present at a trial by the justice which the justice had no warrant of law to hold; nor can his withdrawal from the court be construed as a withdrawal or abandonment of the demand for trial by jury.
6. The questions here raised appear to be somewhat novel in this jurisdiction, notwithstanding that the statute under which they arise has been on the statute book for upwards of three-quarters of a century. But this may readily be accounted for by the fact that trials by jury before justices of the peace were for a long time comparatively rare, and have never at any time fully commended themselves to the better-sense of the community. The decisions of other jurisdictions, depending perhaps on different local, laws or a different public policy, may not be a safe criterion for our guidance in our construction of our own laws; but so far as they *347go, they would seem to sustain the positions here taken. See Vanderwerker v. People, 5 Wend. 530; Grovier v. Hall, 23 Mich. 7; Ten Eyck v. Farlee, 16 N. J. 348; Swasey v. Adair, 88 Cal. 179; Haskins v. Wilson, 5 Wisc. 106. Of course, no authority is needed to support the proposition that, when a trial by jury, is demanded, the justice himself is then without authority to try the issues for which the trial is demanded; for such is the letter of the law. But it would not be correct to say that the authority is then absolutely at an end in such sense that it may not be revived and recalled into effect; for undoubtedly the voluntary withdrawal of the demand would restore it, and would reinvest the justice with the full authority which he had prior to the interposition of the demand.
It is our conclusion, (1) that the discharge of the jury in this case, consequent upon its disagreement, did not terminate the cause, or take away from the justice the power to proceed further therewith; (2) that the failure of the justice after such discharge to continue the cause, by assignment thereof to some day certain thereafter, did not effect a discontinuance thereof, or operate to discharge the defendant therefrom; but that the cause remained in court, subject to be taken up again at any reasonable time thereafter lipón motion and notice; (3) that, upon such motion and notice, it was the duty of the justice, without any further or other demand therefor, to summon and empannel another jury for the trial of the issue between the parties, unless such trial was waived; and that it was not competent for him to try . that issue himself without a jury.
In accordance with these conclusions we understand to have been the views of the court below; for such is the necessary inference from the order which it made and from which the present appeal has been taken.
The order appealed from, therefore, will be affirmed, with costs; and the cause will he remanded to the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in order to carry said order into effect. And it is so ordered.