State ex rel. Sawyer v. Fort

24 S.C. 510, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 1, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 S.C. 510 (State ex rel. Sawyer v. Fort) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Sawyer v. Fort, 24 S.C. 510, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 73 (S.C. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chiee Justice Simpson.

In this case the appellant, J. C. Fort, obtained an order from W. I. Harth, a trial justice in Lexington County, to eject the respondent, Sawyer, from a certain tract of land, by proceedings under section 1818, General Statutes, providing for the ejectment of tenants at will and domestic servants. Thereupon the respondent petitioned his honor, J. B. Kershaw, for the writ of certiorari, which was granted. Upon [517]*517bearing the return to this writ, bis honor holding that the proceedings before the trial justice were without jurisdiction, and therefore null and void, ordered the same to be set aside. The appeal questions the correctness of this order.

The appellant in support of the appeal contends, first, that the office of certiorari is not for the correction of errors of law or fact in the inferior court, but it is to test the jurisdiction of such court, and that this is its only office; second, that the errors complained of here did not involve a jurisdictional question in the Trial Justice’s Court, and therefore, even admitting the complaint to be well founded, yet said errors ai’e beyond the reach of certiorari; the questions involved belonging under the act to the trial justice, and without appeal. The case of Ex parte Childs (12 S. C., 111), is relied upon to sustain the first position, and O'Neale v. Fickling (10 S. C., 301), the second.

Fx parte Childs was a case within the original jurisdiction of this court, and what was said in that case, it must be remembered, was applicable to the office of the writ, as issued by this, the Supreme Court, under the authority of the constitution giving it power to issue certain writs. Art. IY., § 4. And it is true that the court there did hold that the only office of certiorari, when issued by the Supreme Court, was to confine inferior courts within their legal and proper boundary, and that neither errors of law nor of fact, made in a case within the jurisdiction of said courts could be brought up for review by this court under writ of certiorari, issued by said court. This decision was in accordance with the construction of art. IY., section 4, of the constitution given by the Supreme Court in the case of the State ex rel. Wallace v. Hayne and Mackey (8 S. C., 368), in which it was held, that while the power of the Supreme Court, in reference to certain writs named in the constitution, to wit: injunctions, mandamus, &c., was the same as it existed at common law when the constitution wras adopted, yet with reference to other original and remedial writs not named, as certiorari, its power was limited by the words, “as may be necessary to give it general supervisory control of all other courts in the State;” and in the case of Ex parte Childs, sup>ra, these words were construed as limiting the power of this court in such writs to the supervising of the juris[518]*518diction of the other courts, and not to the correction of either errors of law or fact made therein, the powers of this court as to errors of fact and law being confined, under the constitution, to appellate cases in chancery, and to the correction of errors of law under such regulations as the general assembly may prescribe. And no regulations having been prescribed by the general assembly by which the errors of inferior tribunals can be corrected through the medium of certiorari, it followed, as Mclver, A. J., said in delivering the opinion, that such errors could not be so corrected by this court. “And, therefore, however it may be as to the Court of Common Pleas, this court cannot issue a writ of certiorari as a substitute for a writ of error.”

The case of Ex parte Childs, however, did not decido that the Court of Common Pleas in certiorari was confined to jurisdictional errors, as is the Supreme Court. The general question as to the office of certiorari, it is true, was somewhat discussed, but as to the power of the Court of Common Pleas thereunder, there was no positive adjudication, because that question was not before the court; and therefore, as will be seen from the extract above, it was left open. This question, however, has been before our court in at least three cases. State v. Senft & Prioleau, 2 Hill, 367; State v. Steuart, 5 Strob., 29; and Cooper v. Stocker, 9 Rich., 292; in each of which it was held, that while the writ of certiorari could not be regarded as a substitute for an appeal, and while errors of fact could not be reviewed thereunder, yet that the Court of Common Pleas might review errors of law, although not jurisdictional in their nature, when the record had been brought up by the writ.

It may be regarded as somewhat of an anomaly that the Court of Common Pleas should have greater power under the writ of certiorari than the Supreme Court, but yet such is the law under the' cases supra; and besides, when article IV., section 15, of the constitution, in which power is conferred upon the Court of Common Pleas to issue these writs, is compared with section 4, of article IV., conferring this power on the Supreme Court, it would seem that the framers of the constitution had in view this difference. In the first, it is declared that “the Court of Common Pleas shall have power to issue writs of mandamus, prohibition, and scire [519]*519facias, and all other writs which may be necessary for carrying their powers fully into effect.” In the second, that the Supreme Court “shall always have power to issue, * * and such other original and remedial writs as may be necessary to give it general supervisory control over all other courts in the State.” Why this difference in the terms employed, but to show a difference in the powers conferred? And that the Supreme Court has none of the powers of a writ of error, for the correction of errors at law under a certiorari, is made still more plain by the fact, as already stated, that the constitution further provided that such errors of law could be corrected by said court only under such regulations as the general assembly might provide. These regulations have been provided, and they do not include proceeding by certiorari.

So that we conclude that there was no error on the part of the Circuit Judge in looking into all assigned errors of questions of law involved, whether jurisdictional or otherwise, there being no appeal allowed in such cases, the ordinary mode of correcting such errors. State ex rel. McCall v. Cohen, 13 S. C., 198.

It is contended, second, that the trial justice had jurisdiction of the subject matter, and of the person of the respondent, and such being the case that all questions arising were for him, and without appeal — that his decision was final, subject to no review. So far as any errors of law are concerned, what we have said above disposes of this question. But the position of the appellant is correct as to the facts. These cannot be reviewed either by certiorari or by any other process; whether wisely so or not, they are final with the inferior court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 S.C. 510, 1886 S.C. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sawyer-v-fort-sc-1886.