Opinion of the Court Construing the Act of the Legislature

41 Miss. 54
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 41 Miss. 54 (Opinion of the Court Construing the Act of the Legislature) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion of the Court Construing the Act of the Legislature, 41 Miss. 54 (Mich. 1866).

Opinion

Ellett, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The passage by the legislature of an act entitled “ An act to provide for the holding of the High Court of Errors and Appeals of the State of Mississippi, and for other purposes,” approved February 21, 1867, changes materially tbe course of proceeding in the court, and renders it necessary for us, before we separate, to express our views of tbe operation of tbe act, as well for the guidance of the clerk, as for the information of counsel and parties interested.

The act alluded to divides the State into four districts, and requires that a term of this court shall be held once in each year in each of these districts; and it provides that all cases in said dis[55]*55tricts, which maybe carried to the High Court of Errors and Appeals, after the act shall take effect, from any of said districts, shall be directly transmitted to, and heard and tried in, the court so held for the district from whence said cause may come respectively, and tiled and determined as now required by law. The act takes effect from and after the first Monday of April, 1867.

The duty of the court in the regulation of its practice, under the laws prescribed by the legislature, makes it incumbent on us to construe this act, and to declare what business is to be transacted at the several terms appointed by it.

The act assumes to regulate and provide for the holding of this court, and it requires four terms to be held in each year at the times and places named. This necessarily supersedes and abolishes the present terms, and the regulations now existing for the dispatch of business, and it is a remarkable omission that it supplies no method whatever of disposing of the business already depending. There is nothing contained in the act that positively forbids the Court to take up, at any of the new terms, cases not arising within the district in which the court may be sitting. But the affirmative language used, and its general scope and object, seem to indicate a purpose to restrict the court to the trial of causes “ carried ” to it from the particular district; and hence the inquiry arises, whether such a purpose, if it existed on the part of the legislature, can be carried into effect consistently with the conditions of the constitution, which is the paramount law, binding alike on the legislature and the court.

Before the late amendment, the 7th section of the 4th article of the constitution, was in these words, The High Court of Errors and Appeals shall be held twice in each year, at such place as the legislature may direct, until the year 1836, and afterwards at the seat of government of the State.”

This clause was always interpreted as requiring two terms of the court to be held in each year, for the dispatch of all the business pending in the court from all portions of the State. It was considered to be the constitutional right of every suitor to [56]*56have his cause called at every term of the court, and tried and determined, unless continued for good cause. Under this section, the legislature, for the convenience of parties and counsel, appointed the "particular days, in the October term, on which the business coming from each of the general districts should be taken up, and required the court to fix these days for the April term, and to give public notice thereof. But all the causes pending in the court were required to be called at some time during every term.

The amendment adopted in 1865, strikes out the section above quoted, and substitutes the following, “ The High Court of Errors and Appeals shall be held at least once in each year at the seat of government, and at such other place or places, in the State, as the legislature may direct.”

This new provision still requires that at least two terms of the court shall be held in each year; one of which, at least, shall be at the seat of government, or both if the legislature shall see proper, and one of which may be held elsewhere. And the legislature is authorized to increase the number of terms at" discretion, and to direct at what places they shall be held, provided one term shall be retained at the seat of government. On these points there can be no doubt.

But the question we have to consider. is whether, when the terms are appointed, and the places fixed at which they are to be held, it is competent for the legislature to divide up the business, and parcel it out, so that at each term only a portion of the pending cases can be taken up ? If the affirmative of this proposition, can be established, then it is clear that the requirement of the constitution that there shall be at least two terms of the court in each year, can be successfully evaded.

It would hardly be contended, we suppose, that under the constitution as it stood before this amendment, it would have been competent for the legislature to provide that, at one of the terms then required to be held, the business from one part of the State only should be taken up, and that the cases from the other parts of the State should be tried at the other term. That would not have been boldine two terms in the sense of the con[57]*57stitution, but one term only. Sucb a law would therefore have been unconstitutional, and it would have been the duty of the court to disregard the restriction, and to proceed at every term to dispatch all the business before it.

This court, whenever it meets, is the High Court of Errors and Appeals of the whole State, for the decision of all causes dej)ending therein. There must be at least two of these terms in each year, and as many more as the legislature may think demanded by the public good. The more frequently the terms are held, the more the interest and convenience of the people is promoted. But if the legislature can so subdivide the court as to confine its action at any term ‘to the business of particular counties, all the advantages of frequent terms would be lost, and we see nothing that could prevent them, by multiplying the number of these subdivisions beyond the number of terms in a year, and requiring the eases in each to be taken up in rotation, from producing the result that the business of particular districts might be acted upon only once in a number of years. The principle would be the same; and if a suitor can be deprived of his right to be heard at one of two terms held in a single year, he might, by a parity of reasoning, be left with only the right to be heard once in several years.

The prompt and speedy administration of justice, under the law, is a cardinal object of all government. This principle is incorporated in our fundamental law by the 14th section of the Bill of Rights, which declares: “ That all courts shall be open, and every person for an injury done him in his lands, goods, person, or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law, and right and justice administered without sale, denial, or delay.” To secure these ends the government is organized, and its leading features prescribed and adjusted by the constitution. This court is established, and the number of its terms regulated, for this great purpose of the administration of justice; and it is the right of every citizen, at every term, to have remedy for any injury of which he may complain ; and this right cannot be denied or delayed without a violation of the solemn guarantees of the constitution.

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