Sherlock v. Mayor

17 Fla. 93
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 17 Fla. 93 (Sherlock v. Mayor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherlock v. Mayor, 17 Fla. 93 (Fla. 1879).

Opinion

The Chief Justice

delivered the opinion of the court.

Thomas Sherlock files his suggestion by petition for a writ of prohibition against the respondents, and alleges that in July, 1878, he was “engaged in the regular business and occupation of keeping a keno table in said city;” that in April, 1878, he obtained from the proper State and .county officer^ a‘ license to keep a keno table within and throughout the county of Duval, and paid the amounts therefor required by law, for the period of one year; that he also tendered the amount required by law to the city and demanded a license for said business from the city, which license was refused. In July, 1878, petitioner was arrested by the city marshal and taken before the mayor, upon a warrant issued by him, charged on oath with keeping a disorderly house, to-wit: a place where a certain gambling game, known as keno, was allowed to be played, and was played by divers persons with certain cards and instruments, for the chance of winning or losing money, contrary to the ordinances of said city. That he pleaded not guilty to said charge; that the mayor held him to trial, and tried him on said charge without a jury, and after hearing testimony of witnesses, found petitioner guilty, and sentenced him -to pay a fine of one hundred dollars and costs, and that he remain in custody until-the same should be paid; that petitioner then appealed to the Circuit Court •of Duval county, where said cause is still pending on appeal. He further alleges that it is the intention of the mayor and other officers of the city to prosecute him for such pretended violation of the ordinances of the city, and to subject him to fine, costs and imprisonment, &q. That tlie ordinances of-said city declare that every place where gaming of any kind with cards or the game called keno is allowed to be played for winning money is a disorderly house, and any person convicted of keeping such disorderly house shall be punished by fine not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars, or by injprrionment. / He then describes the gafne, and says that it is played in an orderly, peaceful and cmiet manner, and his.house is not a disorderly house.

Petitioner therefore prays that a writ of prohibition may be issued prohibiting the ma.yor and the city, and their officers and employees, from taking any'further proceedings in the prosecution of the case, either before the Mayor’s Court or before the Circuit Court, and from collecting any line or enforcing any imprisonment on account of the premises, and also from attempting to molest him in the conducting of-his said business during the term of his license, by any prosecution for such alleged offence. A copy of the record of the Mayor’s Court is annexed to the petition.

Upon a rule to show cáuse, the respondents appeared and filed a demurrer to the matters alleged by the petitioner in his suggestion, on the following grounds:

1. That it does not appear by the suggestion that the mayor, or the city has exceeded its jurisdiction in adopting or attempting to enforce the ordinance.

2. Because no prosecution is pending before the said mayor, nor is the city now proceeding, or about to proceed, in the said cause.

3. Because it does not appear that the mayor or the city is attempting to collect the fine, or otherwise in an unlawful manner to harass the petitioner.

4. Because the petitioner has an appropriate remedy at law by the ordinary forms of proceeding.

5. Because the payment of a license tax to the State does not give him a right to keep and use a keno table, contrary to the law of the State or the ordinances of the city.

6 Because the ordinance of the city, prohibiting the keeping of such disorderly house as is described, is not in conflict with .the law of the State.

The petitioner joins in demurrer.

The first four grounds of demurrer present the question, whether this court has power under the Constitution and laws to grant the writ of prohibition prayed ?

The writ of prohibition is a writ of the common law, originally issuing only ...out of the court of King’s Bench, a prerogative writ, but"‘afterwards was sometimes issued out of the court of Chancery, Common Pleas, or Exchequer, directed to the judge and parties of a suit in an inferior court, commanding them to cease from the prosecution upon a suggestion that the cause'originally, or some collat- • eral matter arising therein, does not belong to that jurisdiction, but to some'other. (3 Bl. Comm., 112.) This is 1 the elementary definition of the office of the writ.

Chief Justice Savage, (in The People vs. Works, 7 Wend., 487,) says: “It is the remedy provided by the common law against the encroachment of jurisdiction, to keep inferior courts and tribunals within the limits and bounds prescribeto them. The reason of prohibitions in general is that they preserve the rights of courts and of individuals.”

The Constitution of this State expressly gives the Supreme Court jurisdiction to issue- this writ. It does not, in terms, attempt to define or direct the purposes for which the writ may be used or applied. The definition and purposes of the writ must be sought for in the archives of the common law, to which it owes its origin. Its purposes, therefore, are to preserve the rights of courts and individuals from the unlawful encroachment of inferior courts upon the jurisdiction of some other court or tribunal, and to keep them within their own spheres.

When, therefore, an inferior court assumes to exercise a power which is beyond its jurisdiction, or to proceed in a •manner not warranted by law, this writ may be resorted to for redress to prohibit the threatened intrusion.

.If the act complained of be already done, it is manifest that this writ cannot undo it, for that would require an affirmative act. (U. S. vs. Hoffman, 4 Wallace, 158.)

It is held, in reference to the power to issue this writ, that it does not issue for the redress of grievances which may be had in the ordinary course of judicial proceedings, by appeal or writ of error.

Nor will the suggestion that there are or may be other suits of the same nature pending against the relator in the same court avail to procure the writ, since the court will not issue a prohibition in a case not pending for the sole purpose of establishing a principle to govern other cases. [31]*31(High on Ex. Remedies, Sec. 766; U. S. vs. Hoffman, 4 Wallace, 158.)

Mr. Justice Cowen, in ex parte Brandlacht, (2 Hill, N. Y., 367,) says, "the office of prohibition is to prevent courts from going beyond their jurisdiction in the exercise of judicial, not ministerial power. Otherwise we might be called on to send the writ whenever a justice of the peace was about to issue civil or even criminal process irregularly.”

It is a principal of universal application, and one which lies at the very foundation of the law of prohibition, that the jurisdiction is strictly confined to cases where no other remedy exists, and it is always a sufficient reason for withholding the writ that the party -aggrieved has another and complete remedy at law. (High on Ex. Rem., Sec. 770, and authorities cited.) And the writ will not be allowed to take the place of an appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Fla. 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherlock-v-mayor-fla-1879.