Byrd v. Brown

5 Ark. 709
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Ark. 709 (Byrd v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byrd v. Brown, 5 Ark. 709 (Ark. 1844).

Opinion

By the court,

Ringo C. J.

The whole proceeding is based upon, and in every essential part appears to be in conformity with the following enactments of the legislature, viz: Section I. That any circuit court in this State, wherein any judment may have been obtained upon a forfeited delivery bond, which, under the decisions of the supreme court of this State, is erroneous and liable to reversal, shall at any time, upon the mere motion of the plaintiff, and without any notice to the defendant, recall and enter judgment of revocatur upon such judgment with the same effect as if the plaintiff had proceeded by writ of error in the nature of error, coram nobis to have the same recalled. Sec. 2. In all cases where any delivery bond has been heretofore taken and forfeited, and ho judgment entered thereon, the plaintiff may, on motion, and twenty .days notice to the obligors in such bond, without any declaration or formal pleading, obtain judgment on such bond; which judgment shall be entered in the same manner as judgments on penal bonds, the court ascertaining the damages, and on any delivery bond, the judgment whereon has been or may be recalled, the plaintiff may obtain judgment in like manner and without notice. The question therefore, is boldly presented, whether the legislature possesses authority to authorize the circuit court to readjudicate, revise, and reverse its own judgment pronounced in the manner prescribed by this enactment? In the distribution of the judicial power of this state, it appears to have been the design of the constitution to vest in this court exclusively, the power to adjudicate upon, revise, and annul the judgments and decrees of the circuit court. This conclusion is, in our opinion, irresistable upon a careful examinationof the organization of the whole judicial department of the government, and a comparison of the powers with which each tribunal is clothed; from which, it will be- perceived, that all those inferior to this court, from the lowest to the highest, are invested principally with original jurisdiction of such subject matters or cases as are assigned to them respectively, while, except in a very few instances otherwise expressly directed, this court is clothed with appellate jurisdiction only, co-extensive with the State, and that original cognizance of almost every conceivable case, which can possibly arise under our laws and jurisprudence, is by the constitution expressly given to some one of the tribunals inferior to this court. Thus proving the design of the constitution, to parcel out nearly the whole original jurisdiction to the inferior tribunals, leaving the law and the legislature to determine whether this jurisdiction shall be directly exercised upon the adjudications of the tribunals inferior to the circuit court, or whether the cases so adjudged, shall in any manner prescribed by law, first pass therefrom to some other tribunal of higher grade, and be by it adjudged, before the appellate power of this court shall be exercised: and thus a proceeding instituted in the lowest, may, according to the will of the legislature, be required by law to pass through and be adjudicated by every intermediate tribunal, or any number of them, before it can reach this court and be adjudicated and revised by it. But when a readjudication is demanded, it must be the adjudication of-some tribunal other than that in which it was previously decided, and superior to it, according to the spirit and design of the constitution, clearly indicated by the organization of this department; and if there be none such, or none authorized by law to take cognizance of it, the jurisdiction of this court immediately attaches, and in one form or another, may be exercised over it, by virtue of authority expressly^derived from the con-, stitution. Which jurisdiction^ the legislature possesses no power to impair or divest; consequently, as there is no intermediate authority between this and the circuit court, matters of law determined by the latter, when its authority over the judgment is once determined, become conclusive as to the court and parties, and, except by the ad. judication and re-vision of this court, can never be annulled or set aside. Because, by giving this court appellate authority in all cases co-extcnsive with the State, it seems to us to follow, as a necessary consequence, that the authority of this court embraces every case upon which any inferior tribunal has pronounced judgment, whenever its power over the judgment ceases, if not before: and the judgment thus vested in this court by the constitution, the legislature possesses no power to abridge or take away. This, the enactment in question, attempts indirectly to do, by vesting in the circuit court a portion of the jurisdiction vested exclusively in this court by the constitution. If this court can be thus superseded in the exercise of any portion of its constitutional jurisdiction, the same power may, if it so wills, divest it of the whole, by simply providing for its exercise by the circuit or other inferior courts, in giving to them respectively, power at any time to review, readjudicate, revise, and affirm or reverse their, judgments of law previously pronounced upon a bare inspection of the record. But the enactment in question, does not stop at this: it not only supersedes this court in the exercise of a portion of its rightful authority, but authorizes and requires the circuit court “at any time, on the mere motion of the plaintiff, and without any notice to the defendant,” in a certain class of cases in which the judgment given, according to the opinion and decision of this court pronounced in some other case between other parties, is erroneous and liable to be reversed, to “recall and enter judgment of revocatur upon such judgment;” thus assuming to give to the circuit court, power to decide matters of which this court, under thé constitution, had the sole cognizance, by requi. ring it to decide, first, that its former judgment is, under the decisions . of this court, erroneous and liable to reversal, and then, to reyoke and annul it; thereby, in such case, investing it with an authority, and re-quirihg of it the performance of a duty, which can appropriately belong to, and be exercised by an appellate tribunal only; and then, on the like motion of the plaintiff, and without notice to the defendant, ¡required the court to proceed to give judgment for the former against the latter, on the delivery bond which was the foundation of the former judgment so recalled and revoked: thus, at the.same time invading and taking from this court so much of its constitutional authority, and wholly disregarding the rights of the defendant throughout the proceeding, and suffering them without his knowledge, under the guise of judicial sanctity and power to be wantonly and capriciously sported away at the will of the plaintiff. Yet, notwithstanding the injustice which might be inñicted on the defendants under its provisions, we should hesitate to decide it inoperative, if its provisions were not in conflict with some constitutional or other law of superior obligation. But for the reasons assigned, we are clearly of the opinion, that so much of the first section of said enactment as authorizes the circuit court to readjudicate questions of law previously decided by it; and therefore recall and revoke its judgment previously pronounced, and over which its power had ceased, is in conflict with, and repugnant to the provisions contained in the Vi article of the constitution of this State and void. And for this reason, the judgment of revo-catur pronounced in this case, by virtue and in pursuance of said unconstitutional provisions in said act contained, is erroneous and must be reversed.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ark. 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrd-v-brown-ark-1844.