Floyd v. Quinn

52 A. 880, 24 R.I. 147, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 2, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 52 A. 880 (Floyd v. Quinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floyd v. Quinn, 52 A. 880, 24 R.I. 147, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 38 (R.I. 1902).

Opinion

Stiness, C. J.

The plaintiff, who has recovered a verdict against the defendant in the Common Pleas Division, petitions for a new trial upon the ground of erroneous rulings and inadequacy of damages.

The petition was filed in the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, pursuant to Gen. Laws cap. 251, ’§ 3, and the defendant has filed a motion to dismiss it upon the alleged ground that, by the constitution of the State, the exclusive jurisdiction to grant new trials for the causes contained in the plaintiff’s petition is vested in the Supreme Court, established by the constitution; a court different from and superior to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court; which Division cannot constitutionally exercise the jurisdiction of granting new trials.

The number of judges of the Supreme Court is now fixed at seven, and Gen. Laws cap. 221 provide that there shall b'e an Appellate Division and a Common Pleas Division of the court.

The Appellate Division, as the name implies, has the general supervisory jurisdiction of a Supreme Court, and the Common Pleas Division has original jurisdiction, civil and criminal, of all cases tried to a jury. The former division consists of four judges and the latter of three.

Constitutional questions are required to be heard before the full court of seven, when practicable.

The chief justice, or in his absence the senior associate justice, with two others to be assigned by him, are required to sit in the Appellate Division in petitions for new trials, equity and other proceedings, and in all other matters one judge is a quorum.

*149 This distribution of duties and jurisdiction is alleged by the defendant to be unconstitutional.

The constitution, article X, sections 1, 2, says :

“The judicial power of the state shall be vested in one supreme court, and in such inferior courts as the general assembly may, from time to time, ordain and establish.
“Sec. 2. The several courts shall have such jurisdiction as may from time to time be prescribed by law. Chancery powers may be conferred on the supreme court, but on no other court to any greater extent than is now provided by law.”

The first section is the same as the corresponding section of the constitution of the United States; but the second section expresses a legislative power of regulating jurisdiction which is somewhat broader than that of the federal constitution, in which certain original jurisdiction is given to the Supreme Court of the United States. In both the vesting of the judicial power is plenary and exclusive; but in ours the mode and details of exercising the power is left wholly to legislation.

A constitution does not usually deal with details. Numbers of judges, quorums, terms of court, regulation of process, attendance of juries, distribution of jurisdiction, and numerous incidental matters are frequently provided for by law. Hence nothing is determined by our constitution beyond the vesting of complete judicial power in the courts and the requirement that there shall be one Supreme Court.

Taken in the order of a convenient review, the defendant’s first proposition is that the constitution, by creating a Supreme Court, thereby conferred upon that court exclusive jurisdiction, ex vi termini, to grant new trials, which is the power brought in question in this case, and that this power cannot be taken away or diminished.

We do not question that in establishing a Supreme Court there is something in a name. The provision that there shall be a Supreme Court clearly implies that it is not to be subordinate to any other court or tribunal, and that it is to exercise the highest of the judicial functions. Of course it must *150 issue prerogative writs, make its own rules, and control its own business. It is to be a court of last resort.

It does not follow, however, that all cases can go to that court, by appeal or petition, and that there can be no final decision except by that court, if a party desires it. This is apparent, both from principle and practice.

There can be no claim that the vesting of jurisdiction in the Supreme Court, in our constitution, is more imperative than that in the federal constitution, since the vesting clauses are substantially alike and the clause relating to legislative regulation is broader in ours than in the latter.

As to the federal constitution, Hamilton said in the Federalist, No. LXXXI, interpreting this clause :

‘ ‘ The power of constituting inferior courts is evidently calculated to obviate the necessity of having recourse to the Supreme Court in every case of federal cognizance.”
“I should consider everything calculated to give, in practice, an unrestrained course to appeal, as a source of public and private inconvenience.” '

Chief Justice Marshall, of the United States Supreme Court, a member of the convention to revise the constitution of Virginia in 1829, spoke upon the words relating to the courts, including a court of appeals: “The jurisdiction of these tribunals shall be regulated by law,” where our constitution says: “The several courts shall have such jurisdiction as may be prescribed by law,” as follows :

“The article, as it now stands, leaves the whole subject open to the legislature. They may limit or abridge the jurisdiction of all the courts as they please. If the legislature choose to give them all chancery jurisdiction, or, if they shall think fit, to limit their jurisdiction in common law cases to a specific sum, the legislature can do so. The whole subject of jurisdiction is submitted absolutely and without qualification to the power of the legislature.” See also Sharpe v. Robertson, 5 Gratt. 518 (603, 604, 606, 626).

In Chisholm v. Georgia, 2 Dall. 419 (1793) Iredell, J., said : ‘ ‘ The attorney general has suggested a construction that I never heard of before, nor can I now consider it *151 grounded on any solid foundation, though it appeared to me to be the basis of the attorney- general’s argument. His construction I take to be this — that the moment a Supreme Court is formed, it is to exercise all the judicial power vested in it by the constitution by its own authority, whether the legislature has prescribed methods or not. •

“My conception of the constitution is entirely different.I conceive that all the courts of the United States must receive, not merely their organization as to the number of judges of which they are to consist, but all their authority as to the manner of their proceeding, from the legislature only. This appears to me to be one of those cases, with many others, in which an article of the constitution cannot be effectuated without the intervention of legislative authority.”

If these words are applicable to the constitution of the United States, much more must they be true of our constitution which leaves the jurisdiction itself to legislation.

With these citations, it cannot be open to question that jurisdiction may be regulated by law.

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 880, 24 R.I. 147, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-quinn-ri-1902.