Minnesota Central Railway Co. v. McNamara

13 Minn. 508
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 13 Minn. 508 (Minnesota Central Railway Co. v. McNamara) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Central Railway Co. v. McNamara, 13 Minn. 508 (Mich. 1868).

Opinion

Berry, J.

By the Gowt The petitioner took lands of the respondent for right of way, and for depot and elevator grounds. ' Commissioners appointed under the laws from which the company derives its power made an award and report of the compensation which should be paid for such taking, from which report and award the respondent appealed to the District Court for the county of Steele. The appeal was tried by a jury, but the verdict was set aside, and a new trial granted by the Court below. A new trial was had (also by a jury), a verdict rendered for the respondent for $1398.50, and judgment entered thereupon. The. petitioner, having unsuccessfully moved for a second new trial below, now comes to this Court, and upon notice to the respondent’s attorney applies for a writ of certiorari.

The application is based upon a verified petition, containing a brief history of the proceedings below, a document in the [510]*510nature of a bill of exceptions, a copy of the verdict, of tbe order refusing a new trial, and of the judgment; and the prayer of the petition is “that a writ of certiorari may issue to the said District Court of the fifth Judicial District, in and for the County of Steele, commanding said Court that the record of said proceedings, and judgment, and the evidence herein before, and in said bill of exceptions stated at large upon the point of the special benefits derived by the respondent’s land by reason of the location of petitioner’s road, depot and elevator thereon, and the rulings of the Court upon the rejection of testimony thereon, and the charges and refusal to charge the jury upon said subject of special benefits, and the petitioner’s exceptions thereto, be certified to this Court. That said judgment, order, verdict, and proceeding be quashed, set aside and reversed, in that the said District Court committed an irregularity in disregarding the directions of said statute, as to the deduction of special benefits, and transcended the power vested in the said Court in and by said statute, and for errors at law occurring at the trial and excepted to by the petitioner, and for uncertainty and invalidity of the verdict.”

The petitioner having no right of appeal to this Court in a case like that at bar, (see McNamara vs. M. C. R. Co., 12 Minn., 388,) must obtain a remedy for the errors assigned, through the writ of certiorari, if at all. The first question which we have to examine is: Will the writ of certiorari bring up for review the errors or irregularities complained of? If it will not, then this application must be dismissed. It has been said that the writ of certiorari brings up nothing, but the record, or the proceedings in the nature of a record, and that therefore the Court to which the return is made can only review errors apparent upon such record or proceedings, and cannot examine the rulings of the inferior tribunal upon the. admission or exclusion of evidence, or the giving or refusal [511]*511of instruction to a jury. The respondent’s counsel adopts this view of the scope of the writ of certiorari, and relies mainly upon the decisions of the Courts, of New York. As to these it is perhaps sufficient to quote the following language of Mr. Justice Morgan, in a case later than any cited by the counsel — Baldwin vs. City of Buffalo, 35 N. Y., 380: “ The decisions -of the Courts in relation to the office of a common law certiorari are so conflicting, that it is quite impossible to say that any settled rule has ever been established in this State, which has not been subsequently departed from. It is unnecessary to cite the cases, but I will observe that according to the decisions in this Court, such a writ will bring up so much of the evidence as is necessary to present the question of law upon which the. relator relies, to avoid the determination of the inferior tribunals.” See also Mullins vs. The People, 24 N. Y., 399; 25 N. Y., 315. In the still later case of Swift vs. City of Poughkeepsie, 37 N. Y., 516, it is said: <£ The plaintiff denies the efficacy of this remedy upon the ground that upon a certiorari the Court will only consider the question of jurisdiction, and that in this case, if the Court found as it would upon the doctrine now proclaimed, that the assessors had jurisdiction, their de» termination as to the legality of the tax could not have been reviewed. It is true that this has been the doctrine of the Courts to a considerable extent, upon what ground either of principle or necessity I nevér could very clearly comprehend. But I think at this time a more liberal rule would and should be applied, and that a certiorari would not only bring up the naked question of jurisdiction, but the evidence on which the body acted to which the writ is directed, as well as the ground or principle of their action, and thus present the entire case for review, and if necessary for correction.” In Inhabitants of Mendon vs. Co. Com's of Worcester, 2 Allen, 464, C. J. [512]*512Bigelow says: “ It appears by tbe petition that tbe error, to correct whibh it is claimed that a writ of certiorari ought to issue, was not in any manner apparent on the record, * * but in an erroneous ruling by them in matter of law relating to the burden of proof. * * It is true that the remedy of certiorari in our practice has been chiefly confined to cases where some error or defect in proceedings in their nature judicial, which are not according to the course of the common law, appears on the record. But we are of opinion that the remedy is not necessarily confined to that class of cases. Indeed if it were, parties would be wholly without any remedy in all cases where the law gives them no right of appeal, or of exceptions, or any other mode of presenting questions of law for revision by a higher tribunal, arising on proceedings which do not appear on the record. * * It would be a serious defect in the administration of justice if no means were provided by which parties aggrieved could bring up before this Court any matter of law, except such formal errors and defects as may be shown on the face of the proceedings. But no such defect exists in our jurisprudence. By Gen. Sts., Chap. 112, seo. 3, a general superintendence is given to this Court of all Courts of inferior jurisdiction, to correct and prevent errors and abuses therein when no other remedy is expressly provided, and for this purpose to issue writs of error, 'certiorwi, mcmdairms, &c., necessary to the furtherance of justice. This broad and .general authority was doubtless conferred for the purpose of enabling this Court to bring before them any proceedings of judicial tribunals where there was no special mode prescribed for reviewing and correcting them.” Our statute declares that “ the Supreme Court has power to issue writs of error, certiorari, mandamus, prohibition and all other writs and processes not especially provided' for by law, to all Courts of inferior jurisdiction, to [513]*513corporations and to individuals, that are necessary for the furtherance of justice and the execution of the laws,” and further that “said Court is vested with full power and authority necessary * * for the exercise of its jurisdiction as the supreme judicial tribunal of the State.” Gen. Stats., Ohcup. 68, sees. 1 and 2. So far as the question under examination is concerned, we are of opinion that the language of our statute is substantially equivalent to that of the statute of Massachusetts above referred to, and that it should receive a like construction.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Minn. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-central-railway-co-v-mcnamara-minn-1868.