Planters' & Mechanics' Bank of Columbus v. Chipley

1 Georgia Decisions 50
CourtMuscogee County Superior Court, Ga.
DecidedApril 15, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Georgia Decisions 50 (Planters' & Mechanics' Bank of Columbus v. Chipley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Muscogee County Superior Court, Ga. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Planters' & Mechanics' Bank of Columbus v. Chipley, 1 Georgia Decisions 50 (Ga. Super. Ct. 1842).

Opinion

The facts stated in the petition are admitted. Is the Court of the Justices of the Peace, in this State, a Court of Record! This has long been, and still is, a vexed question in Georgia. “A Court of Record is that where the acts and the judicial proceedings, aro enrolled on parchment, for a perpetual memorial and testimony, which rolls of Court are called the Records of the Court, and are of such high and supereminent authority, that their truth is not to be called in question : for it is a settled rule and maxim, that nothing shall be averred against a Record, nor shall any plea, or even proof, be admitted to the contrary. And if the existence of a Record be denied, it shall be tried by nothing but itself; that is, upon the inspection whether there be any such Record or no ; else there would be no end of dispute. But if there be any mistake of the Clerk, in making up such Record, the Court will direct him to amend it. All Courts of Record, are the King’s Courts, in right of his Crown and Royal dignity, and therefore no other Court hath authority to fine and imprison ; so that the very erection of a new jurisdiction, with the power of fine and imprisonment, makes it a Court of Record.” Black. Com. 3 vol. p. 23, 24. “ Record, Recordum, is a memorial, or remembrance in rolls of parchment, of the proceedings and acts of a Court of Justice, which hath power to hold plea, according to the course of the Common Law-, of real or mixed actions, or of actions quare vi et armis, or of personal actions, whereof the debt or damage amounts to forty shillings, or above, which we call Courts of Record, and are created by Parliament, letters patent, or prescription. But, legally, records are restrained to the rolls of such only which are Courts of Record, and not to the rolls of Inferior, nor any other Courts, which proceed not secundum legem et consuetudinem Anglia.”— 3 Coke. Litt. 322, 323. Tested by these definitions, the Courts of Justices of the Peace, in this State, are not Courts of Record. They do not enroll on parchment (or on paper) their acts and proceedings-.do not hold plea, according to the course of the Common Law, of [52]*52real or mixed actions, or of actions quare vi ei armis, nor did they originally possess jurisdiction of debts exceeding forty shillings. The slight increase in the number of shillings, which may be now demanded in these Courts, can have effected no change in their legal natures. I have said that they originally could take cognizance of debts less than forty shillings only. The country is much indebted to the recent labors of the presiding Judge of the Southern Circuit, (the Hon. C. B. Cole,) on this subject. He has traced back the Courts of the Justices of the Peace, in this State, to the old Courts of Requests, of London, or the Court of Conscience, as it was more freqently called.

See the case of the Monroe Rail Road and Banking Company vs. Scott, and others, published in the Federal Union, of the 22nd March last. Bacon says of this Court: “ There is also the Court of Requests, which is called the Court of Conscience, and is held before certain Commissioners, at Guildhall, and was established for recovering small debts, under forty shillings, but now raised to debts not exceeding five pounds.” — 2 vol. Bac. Abrid. 546. This Court, all the authorities agree, was not a Court of Record.

The Act of the Legislature of this State in which the title or appellation of this old jurisdiction, the Court of Requests of London, or the Court of Conscience, was changed to the one now in use, viz. the Justices’ Courts, was passed in 1789. The 4th Section of that Act, provides, “ That the Justices of the several counties, or any one or more of them, shall have authority and jurisdiction, to hear and determine all suits, for any debt or liquidated demand, due by judgment, specialty, or account, for any sum or sums of money, not exceeding five pounds sterling, by petition, in a summary way, without the solemnity of a Jury. And the said Justice, or Justices, is, and are hereby, authorized to give judgment: and ten days after giving such judgment, award execution thereon, and not before.”— Watk. Dig. 401. A popular error on the subject of the legal nature and constitution of Courts of Record, flows from the fact that the enrolling of their acts and proceedings on parchment, (or on paper,) is found very generally to obtain in Courts of Record, and may be regarded as a common and somewhat characteristic feature in them. It is taken as true, to some extent, on the faith of this fact, that all [53]*53Courts, whose proceedings are attested by written evidence, are Courts of Record. The authority of Lord Coke has just been quoted to the contrary. “ But legally, records are restrained to the rolls of such Courts as are Courts of Record, and not to the rolls of Inferior, nor any other Courts, which proceed not secundum legem et consue-tudinem Anglia.” Indeed, some Courts of very high authority and extensive jurisdiction, are not technically and legally Courts of Record.

“ There are several of the King’s Courts not of record — as the Court of Equity in Chancery, the Courts of Admiralty,” &c. — Note 151 to 3 vol. Black. Com. 25. 4 Inst. 84, “ The technical notion of a record is restricted to the rolls of such Courts, only as proceed according to the course of the Common Law.” The Court of Request of London, of which the Justices’ Courts of this State, are but a modern version, was not of Common Law origin. It was created by the King and Council, in the reign of Henry VIII. It was confined, too, at its creation, exclusively to the city of London. Its proceedings were not by writ and plea, but by summons or warrant. The mode and character of proof were variant from the Common Law — the parties themselves were examinable before the Commissioners. Lastly, the decision of the Commissioners was final and conclusive between the parties, without the intervention of a Jury. Our own Justices’ Courts, by their present and proper appellation as such, for a long time proceeded “ without the solemnity of a Jury.” The provisional and limited right of trial by Jury, of five men, which now exists in those Courts, is of comparatively recent date. It is not the Common Law right of trial by Jury, by any means. Blackstone, speaking of that mode of trial, says, that it is “ a trial that has been used time out of mind in this nation, and seems to have been coeval with the first civil government thereof.” — 3 vol. Com. p. 350. And again, at p. 351, same vol., he proceeds: “ when therefore an issue is joined, by these words, and this the said A. B. prays may be enquired of by the Country,” or, “ and of this he puts himself upon the Country, and the said C. D. doth the like,” the Court awards a venire facias, upon the roll, or record, commanding the Sheriff, “ that he cause to come here on such a day, twelve free and lawful men, liberos et legales homines, of the body of this county, by whom the truth of the matter may be better known, and who are [54]*54neither of kin to the aforesaid A. R., or the aforesaid C. D., to recognize the truth of the issue between the parties.” I am not deciding, whether the subject of Great Britain, in all cases, and as a matter of course, was entitled to this mode of trial. I am simply defining the right of trial by Jury, as it was usually enjoyed from the earliest age of English jurisprudence, in the case of an issue, joined in civil causes, and in the exercise of which in the manner just pointed out, may be regarded as a correct tost, or example, of the ordinary course of it.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Georgia Decisions 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/planters-mechanics-bank-of-columbus-v-chipley-gasuperctmuscog-1842.