Tlie prosecutor was convicted in the recorder’s court of the town of Verona for having violated subdivision 3 of section 14 of the Motor Vehicle act, approved April 8th, 1921, in that he, “William Eullerton, did on the 12th daj-- of October, a., d. 1923, on a public highway of the borough of Verona, in the county of Essex and State of New Jersey, to wit, on Bloomfield avenue, said Bloomfield avenue being at said time and place a public highway in the State of New Jersey, operate a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor,” &c. By the record before us it appears that on the 29th day of October, 1923, the prosecutor was tried upon the complaint made, and the recorder, after hearing the testimony of the witnesses and of the accused, William Eullerton, found the latter guilty of the offense charged in, the complaint, and committed him to tlie common ■jail of Essex county for a period of thirty days, and revoked his driver’s license.
From this conviction and judgment the prosecutor appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Essex county, and the case was there tried de novo as directed by the statute 'in cases where an appeal is taken, and that court, after hearing the testimony on part of the state and of the defendant and his witnesses, made the following pronouncement :
“The evidence being closed, the court says it finds the defendant guilty of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor in violation of subdivisión 3, section 14, of “An act defining motor vehicles, &c., approved April 8th, 1921. Sentence postponed until February 18th, 1924.”
The writ of certiorari was applied for and allowed on February 8th, 1924.
The reasons filed in this court are entitled as follows:
“New Jersey Supreme Court. William Fullerton v. Frank Bescherer, respondent. The prosecutor presents the following reasons for setting aside the conviction before the recorder’s court of the town of Verona, New Jersey, which *1145said conviction is brought before this court by a writ of certiorari in a cause entitled as above.” Then the. prosecutor presents nine reasons why the conviction and judgment in the recorder’s court should be set aside. No reason is presented for setting aside the conviction in the Court of Common Pleas.
We think the writ was improvidently allowed and should be dismissed.
It is to be observed that section 28 of the Motor Vehicle act directs that the Common Pleas Court shall try the case de novo, "and in a summary way try and determine all such appeals, and in case the judgment or sentence of the magistrate shall he reversed on such appeal, the said Court of Common Pleas shall order,” &e.
The language of the section leaves no room for doubt that there must be a final determination of the appeal before it.
The prosecutor took his appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, from the conviction and judgment of the recorder, as he was entitled to under section 28, supra. He prosecuted his appeal by going to trial and having selected his forum, he cannot now resort to a writ of certiorari directed to the Court of Common Pleas for the purpose of reviewing the proceedings had before the recorder. See State v. McCarty, 2 N. J. Adv. R. 8.
We further are of the opinion that in a case of this nature, g-ucisi-eriminal, where the matter is brought by an appeal by the prosecutor into the Court of Common Pleas, and the prosecutor is defeated, in his appeal, he is not entitled to a writ of certiorari until a judgment has been pronounced. We have not been referred to any case which holds otherwise.
Moreover, there are no reasons filed which call into question the legality of the proceedings in the Common Pleas Court.
In State, William Dunn, Prosecutor, v. Overseer of the Poor of South, Amboy, 32 N. J. L. 275, Mr. Justice Vredenburgh (at p. 283) says: "In Vannoy r. Givens, Mr. Justice Carpenter says, we cannot reverse for error of the justice, *1146for it is not his judgment, but the judgment of the appellate court, that is before us for review.”
In Hendricks v. Craig, 2 South. 569, the Court of Common Pleas says: “It was the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas which was removed, and the court could not look beyond it to the proceedings of the justice in order to find in them an objection, which had done the defendants an injury.”
The language used by Mr. Justice Yredenburgh, in State, Dunn, Prosecutor, v. Overseer of the Poor, supra (on p. 284), is pertinent to- the situation presented here. The learned justice said: “But it is urged, in the next place, that although this court cannot set aside the proceedings in the sessions, yet that they ought to set aside the order of the two justices for these alleged defects therein. There are many cases, both in the King’s- Bench and in this court, where the proceedings before the justices have been quashed for defective orders, where there has been no< appeal. But no case, I apprehend, can be found where this court has been constrained, by force of law, to affirm the proceedings on appeal, and yet quash the proceedings before the two justices.
“The order on appeal ipso facto nullifies the order of the two justices. As long as the proceedings of the appellate court stand, there is no order of the two justices. The only way to revive the order of the two justices is to set aside the proceedings of the sessions, and then this court may quash the proceedings of the two justices. If the two justices had not jurisdiction, what possible légal effect can result from setting aside the order of the justices, while the order on appeal is permitted to stand. Such a- proceeding would only be nullifjúng what is alread3r a nullity-.” Vannoy v. Givens, 3 Zab. 202; 3 East. 62; 2 Harr. 22.
So it seems to us tQ set aside the conviction and judgment of the recorder’s court would be of no advantage to the prosecutor so long as the conviction of the Common Pleas was in force, and the validity of that conviction has not been challenged by.anvr of the reasons presented by the prosecutor.
*1147We are not to be understood as holding that the proceedings before the recorder, if he was without jurisdiction of the subject-matter, or of the person of the accused, are not reviewahle by certiorari or by habeas corpus, or in the method prescribed by section 35 of the Motor Vehicle act (at p. 685), but what we are deciding is that where an appeal has been taken which provides for a trial de novo in the appellate court, and such trial is had, the proceedings to réview the appeal must be directed against the court in which such appeal has been “heard and determined,” which phrase can mean nothing else than where judgment has been given.
These views lead to a dismissal of the writ.