Hanvey v. Thompson

243 So. 2d 748, 286 Ala. 614, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 844
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 4, 1971
Docket8 Div. 394, 394A
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 243 So. 2d 748 (Hanvey v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanvey v. Thompson, 243 So. 2d 748, 286 Ala. 614, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 844 (Ala. 1971).

Opinion

BLOODWORTH, Justice.

These cases' (consolidated on appeal) come to us on a writ of certiorari to the Court of Civil Appeals, 46 Ala.App. 476, 243 So.2d 743. The petition for the writ was assigned to another member of the court on preliminary consideration. After the writ was granted, it was reassigned to the writer. ,

The writ seeks to have us review and reverse the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals which reverses two judgments for the plaintiffs totalling $10,000, after jury verdicts in their favor in the Madison County Circuit Court.

*616 Petitioners (plaintiffs below) contend that the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals (in holding that a certain requested charge should have been given) is a case of first impression in Alabama and is in conflict with a prior decision of our court; and that it construes a statute (Pedestrian Walk and Wait Signals, Title 36, § 58(38), Code of Alabama 1940) which is also a case of first impression in Alabama.

Before the petition was granted, respondent filed a “motion to strike” it. After the writ was granted, respondent filed a “motion to discharge” the writ. In both motions respondent contends that there is no conflict with any prior decision of our court, nor is this a case of first impression in Alabama. Plence, he urges in brief:

“ * * * In the present case the Writ should be discharged because the petition shows on its face that the decision of the Court of [Civil] Appeals does not fall within any of the categories provided by the Legislature in Section 32. 1 The Court of Civil Appeals, in particular, was created in order to reduce the staggering case load under which the Supreme Court of Alabama has toiled for years. Recognizing that the case load and output of decisions of the Supreme Court of Alabama was intolerable, the highest per justice in the United States, the Legislature narrowly limited the types of decisions for the revievu of which a petition for writ of certiorari could be granted. The obvious intent of this limitation was to insure that the Court of Civil Appeals would, in fact, be a Court of last resort rather than a mere stepping-stone to the Supreme Court. * * *» [Emphasis supplied] [Note supplied]

While we appreciate his alluding to the burdensome case loads under which this court operated prior to October 1, 1969, 2 we cannot agree with respondent’s comment that the legislature can narrowly limit the “types of decisions for the review of which a petition for writ of certiorari could be granted.”

In the landmark case of Ex parte Louisville & Nashville R. Co., 176 Ala. 631, 58 So. 315 (1912), this court construed Section 140, Constitution 1901, 3 with respect to our power and authority to superintend and control the Court of Appeals (then newly created). As Justice (later Chief Justice) Anderson writing for the court observed:

“ * * * The Constitution authorizes the creation of an inferior appellate court with final jurisdiction, and, when said court is given final jurisdiction, this court is shorn of appellate jurisdiction, but the jurisdiction so made is subject to the superintendence and control of the Supreme Court by the express terms of the Constitution. The Legislature did not intend to establish an appellate court with co-ordinate jurisdiction and powers with the Supreme Court, and could not have done so, under the Constitution, had it so intended. ‘It is not in the power of the Legislature to make the Supreme Court inferior in any respect to any other tribunal, but it remains, secure from legislative attack, the highest judi *617 cial power distributed by the Constitution. There must be in every state a court capable of exercising ultimate judicial power. * * * In this state * * * that is the Supreme Court. If it were otherwise, there would be no organ of government capable of authoritatively settling judicial questions; and there must be such an organ there can be no doubt, for the judicial department is an independent one, and the element of sovereignty delegated to that department must, as in the case of the executive and legislative, reside, in its last and highest form, in one tribunal, one officer, or body of officers. While we are clear that no statute can deprive the Supreme Court of its rank as the highest and ultimate repository of judicial power, we are equally clear that appellate jurisdiction of an inferior grade may be conferred upon other appellate tribunals. The Legislature cannot, under the guise of conferring inferior appellate jurisdiction upon other tribunals, grant them unlimited appellate jurisdiction; but it may grant such tribunals appellate jurisdiction by limiting it to classes of cases not of the highest grade and restricting its authority to appeals from recoveries of a limited nature.’ — Branson v. Studabaker, 133 Ind. 147, 33 N.E. 98.
“Not only does the Constitution reserve unto this court the power and authority to superintend and control the Court of Appeals, but the act creating the Court of Appeals (Gen.Acts 1911, p. 100, § 10) recognizes the power of this court to control the proceedings and decisions of said Court of Appeals. It says: ‘The decisions of the Supreme Court shall govern the holdings and the decisions of the Court of Appeals, and the decisions and proceedings of such Court of Appeals shall be subject to the general superintendence and control of the Supreme Court as provided by section 140 of the Constitution of the state.’ * *

Likewise, in Act No. 987, supra, the act creating the present Courts of Appeals, the legislature recognizes the power of this court to control the proceedings and decisions of the Courts of Appeals. Section 10 of the Act is but a copy of that section of the Acts of 1911, quoted supra.

Justice Anderson went on to say for the Court, beginning at page 636, 58 So. at page 317:

“This court has previously construed the meaning of the words ‘superintendence and control’ as used in former Constitutions, and we must assume that, when they were brought forward into section 140 of the present Constitution, they were used and employed subject to their well-known interpretation. In the case of Ex parte Croom & May, 19 Ala. [561], 566, it was said: ‘It is the duty of this court, in order to enable it to carry out the powers with which the Constitution invests it, of exercising “a general superintendence of inferior jurisdictions,” to adopt such course of proceedings as will make its control complete. Ex parte Chaney, 8 Ala. 424.’ In the case of Ex parte Candee, 48 Ala. [386], 412, the court quotes approvingly from the case of Ex parte Croom & May, supra, and says: ‘Under this section of the Constitution, the Legislature may impose such restrictions and regulations, not repugnant to the Constitution, upon the appellate jurisdiction of this court, but it [the legislature] has no power to limit or prescribe the mode and manner in which it [the Supreme Court] must exercise its povoer to issue the writs therein named, and such other remedial and original writs as may be necessary to give it a general superintendence and control of inferior jurisdictions.

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Hanvey v. Thompson
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Bluebook (online)
243 So. 2d 748, 286 Ala. 614, 1971 Ala. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanvey-v-thompson-ala-1971.