State v. . Lane

26 N.C. 434
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 N.C. 434 (State v. . Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Lane, 26 N.C. 434 (N.C. 1844).

Opinion

RuffiN, C. J.

The Court has very deliberately considered the question arising in the case and we are all of opinion, that the decision in the Superior Court was erroneous, and that the Attorney General’s motion must be granted.

Some preliminary objections may be stated to the course adopted in the Superior Court, which could not easily be obviated, although the main position were true, that, upon the death of one of the judges of this Court, the two surviving are not competent to hold the Court. Upon what rule of evidence is the affidavit of the prisoner to be deemed better proof than the certificate from this Court, that the prisoner’s appeal had been duly considered and decided? But, if that difficulty were removed, there yet remains the undoubted principle of law, that every act of a Court has relation *445 to the first term, and the admitted fact, that Judge Gaston was then alive and sitting in Court, and, indeed,, as to this particular case, he united with the other Judges in hearing the argument in part. How could- the Superior Court judicially ascertain, that the opinion- of the Court was not formed and expressed with his concurrence,, although, after his death, the surviving Judges might- have been willing to hear any thing further that could be said for- the prisoner, that might change their opinions. We suppose, indeed, from his high judicial station, the Superior Court and all the other authorities of the State, might ex ojjicio take notice of Judge Gaston’s demise, and regulate their action accordingly. But the enquiry would still remain, what should be the action of the Superior Court, in such cases; and whether that Court should say that the prisoner’s case had not been decided by the three Judges,.in- opposition to- the certificate purporting to emanate from this Court,, as ofa day anterior to Judge Gaston’s death,that the Court (of which Judge Gas-ton then constituted a member) had-adjudged the prisoner’s case against him. If the Judge ofthe Superior Court entertained doubts of the authority of particular Judges hold this Court, and also found- reasonho believe that, in point of fact, thsse incompetent judges gave a particular judgment, it may be his duty in concience, as far as he can, to frame his own course in such a way as to enable the party, affected by the judgment, to bring the matter to the , consideration or reconsideration of the Supreme Court, when it shall be properly constituted, according to the notion ofthe Judge of the Superior Court. He may postpone the execution until after the succeeding term of the Supreme Court, and that tribunal, consisting of all the members which can sit in it, may then say, whether the supposed judgment is or is not the judgment of the Court, that is, whether the record of it is really a record of the Supreme Court,.or the minutes of persons usurping its authority. If some of the Judges assume powers which belong only to all of them collectively, it is undoubtedly, an offence, punishable by impeachment or in *446 any other mode prescribed by law. It mnst be also undoubtedly true, that the Supreme Court is competent to devise a remedy for the party, against whom such pseudo Court professed to give judgment, by vacating the same, or in some other manner, and that these proceedings or a judgment of an inferior Court, founded on it, might be superseded, and the latter judgment itself finally be reversed or vacated. But in the mean while, considering the relation between the Supreme judicial tribunal of a State and all others,- it does not comport with that comity and harmony, which are indispensable to' their regular and useful action, that the inferior Court should resist the Supreme authority,- by' directly refusing to- obey the mandate of a writ in due form, and purporting to issue from the latter and to require certain acts to be performed by the former. It must be seen,-that it is better to leave to this Court, in the first instance,- the redress of wrongs done to a citizen in its name by persons, not legally constituting the Court, than for a Judge ofthe Superior Court to take on himself to protect the public from the supposed usurpations of those, who are vested with a higher judicial authority than his otvn. Fox-,- if it be right, that he should do so in this instance, it must be so in every case in Which he might think this Court had not jurisdiction, although all three of the judges of this Court might have held and decided,- that they had. Upon the question of jurisdiction, the consequence is necessarily the same that an adjudication beyond it is void, no matter who makes it, whether some or the Whole of the judges. If, therefore,- a Judge of the Superior Court should think, that this Court,- fully constituted according to his own admission,- hath transcended its jurisdiction, he Would, upon the principle' of the decision in this case, not be bound by the judgment, but obliged, moral-ly and legally, to resist it. The effect would be, to make the Judge of the Superior Conrt the paramount judge; since if the Supreme Court should again say, as we do ill this case, that the former decision was rightfully made, the inferior Judge replies again, that he is still not bound, because the *447 Supreme Court had not jurisdiction, and therefore was not competent to make the decision. This absurdity and the very nature of judicial subordination prove, that, as in respect-to the jurisdiction of other Courts and other general questions of law, the decision of the Supreme Court is final, so in respect to its own jurisdiction the decision of the Supreme Court must not only be final, but its right to decide it must be conclusive. Although the sovereign may punish the Ju dgcs for assuming a j urisdiction not conferred by law, yet in respect of other Courts, what the Supreme Court holds to be within its jurisdiction is thereby made so, inasmuch as no Court can reverse the decision, nor can be allowed to resist it, unless it may also be allowed to refuse to carry into execution every judgment of the Supreme Court, which to the inferior Court may seem erroneous. To correct a mistake of the Supreme Court on a question of its jurisdiction, or to va--cate and annuli proceedings done in the name of the Supreme Court, and entered among its records as the acts of the Supreme Court, must, necessarily, be the province of the Supreme Court itself, and of that alone.

The foregoing observations have not been made with the view to a decision of the case without the discussion or decis--ion of the larger question, with respect to the powers and duties of the persons, appointed to be the judges- of this-Court. Far from it; for it would not become us,- who sit here, to evade th'e direct decision of that question by any means whatever. Indeed, we should not have stopped to say a word on the subjects hitherto discussed, had we not thought it of some consequence to state, what is the proper course to correct an excess of jurisdiction by this Court, or the assumption of its authority by persons not fully invested with it, so as to avoid the direct conflict between the Supreme and Superior Courts in the manner exhibited in this case.

For the purposes of the other question, we will, then, assume that Judge Gaston had died before the last term be *448 gan and that his seat had not been filled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.C. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lane-nc-1844.