Van Slyke v. Trempealeau County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance

39 Wis. 390
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 39 Wis. 390 (Van Slyke v. Trempealeau County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Slyke v. Trempealeau County Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance, 39 Wis. 390 (Wis. 1876).

Opinion

Ryan, O. J.

Mere imputation of prejudice to the circuit judge, made in proper time by either party to a civil action, entitles the party making it to a change of the venue. Ch. 123, sec. 8, R. S.; ch. 206 of 1862. With a view, doubtless, of mitigating such inconvenience, ch. 69 of 1870 authorizes the parties to avoid change of the venue on that ground, by stipulating that a member of the bar of this court shall act as judge in the cause, with all the powers and duties of the circuit judge.

- Such a statute might work well. But we cannot consider [392]*392it competent under tbe constitution. That instrument vests all judicial jurisdiction in courts and justices of tbe peace, and provides for tbe election of judges of all courts; and tbe legislature can confer none on other officers or persons, excepting power not exceeding tbat of a circuit judge at chambers, on certain officers now called court® commissioners. Att'y Gen. v. McDonald, 3 Wis., 805; Gough v. Dorsey, 27 id., 119; Conroe v. Bull, 7 id., 408. So manifest is this intent to distribute and restrict tbe exercise of judicial authority by express grant, tbat tbe framers of tbe constitution deemed it necessary to give express authority to tbe judge of one circuit to bold court in another. Tbe statute in question was well intended, but obviously overlooked tbe constitutional restriction. It seems too manifest for discussion tbat, under tbe constitution, no one can bold a circuit court but a circuit judge. Certainly not a court commissioner', who can only act as circuit judge at chambers. A fortiori, not one bolding no judicial office: a gentleman of tbe bar assuming no judicial office, but merely chosen by tbe parties to an action to act as a sort of judicial arbitrator in it. If tbe statute before us could be upheld, we do not see why one could not which should assume to give to tbe parties, in all actions, in all courts, power to stipulate tbe judges off tbe bench, and private persons into their seats. Judicial power is one of the attributes of sovereignty, necessarily delegated in its exercise. Tbe constitution does not leave tbe delegation loose at tbe discretion of tbe legislature. It delegates tbe judicial power to constitutional courts, to be held by constitutional judges. And these constitutional judges take no power from tbe constitution, can take none from tbe legislature, to subdelegate their judicial functions. See tbe instructive case on this subject of Cohen v. Hoff, 3 Brevard, 500.

Tbe respondent petitioned tbe court below, representing tbe judge to be related to tbe parties and necessarily and insensibly prejudiced in tbe case, but not praying change of tbe [393]*393venue. We give no opinion whether the petition properly raised the question of prejudice. The learned judge himself evidently thought that it did.

The parties thereupon filed a stipulation that Mr. Cole, a member of the bar of this court, should act as judge on the trial of the cause; and the court below made an order, reciting the petition for prejudice, and ordering the cause to he tried before Mr. Cole as judge of the court, in accordance with the statute.

The trial appears to have taken place before Mr. Cole and a jury, who found for the respondent. There is in the record what purports to be a bill of exceptions and an order refusing a new trial, signed by Mr. Cole. The judgment is signed by the clerk, with a statement at its head that Mr. Cole sat as judge on the trial.

We cannot look into the bill of exceptions or consider the order denying a new trial, because both are unofficial and devoid of judicial authority. They are as any other irrelevant papers finding their way by accident or mistake into the record of a cause. And the only question for us is, whether we should hold the judgment supported by a presumption that it rests upon a proper trial of the issue, or should consider it as rendered by Mr. Cole, and therefore not properly the judgment of the court below.

We cannot doubt that the latter is the proper view. All judgments are by the consideration of the court. Judieia in deliber ationibus matmrescu/nt. The judicial mind goes to all judgments, either by particular consideration or by general consideration established by rule. There must be actual or constructive consideration of the judge of the court. Judi-cmm est quasi jv/ris dictum. And it is the voice of the judge 'only which is the voice of the law. Judex est lex loquens. And we cannot close our eyes to the truth so patent in this record, that, in compliance with the statute before us, the learned judge of the court below abdicated his judicial office [394]*394and function, for tbis canse, in favor of Mr. Cole. And it was by consideration of Mr. Cole, not of tbe circuit judge, tbat tbis judgment went. Indeed, with tbe suggestion uncontro-verted tbat tbe judge was related to tbe parties, we do not see bow be could well sit in tbe cause, E. S., cli. 123, sec. I. Be tbat as it may, tbe record discloses tbat be left tbe bench and Mr. Cole toot bis place upon it, assumed bis duties in tbe cause, and tided it; and tbat upon Mr. Cole’s quasi judicial consideration and voice only, tbis judgment was rendered. It was literally coram non judice.

Tbis pbrase is commonly applied directly to tbe court itself. But it applies, in its proper sense, to a court not having jurisdiction of a matter, pnly because tbe judge is, quoad hoc, not a judge. And tbe judge de jure et de facto of a court not having jurisdiction of a cause in it, is, for tbat cause, like a private person assuming to exercise judicial functions over it. When tbe court has not jurisdiction of tbe cause, there tbe whole proceeding is coram non judice, .... and therefore tbe said rule .... qui jussio judicii aViquod fecerit (but when be has no jurisdiction, non est judex) non videtur dolo malo fecisse, quia qqarere necesse est, was well allowed, but it is not of necessity to obey him who is not judge of the cause, no more than it is a mere stranger, for tbe rule is, judicúum a non suo judice datum nullvas est momenhi.” Marshalsea case, 10 Rep., 68 b, 76 a; cited and approved in Taylor v. Clemson, 2 Ad. & E., N. S., 978. “ It is tbe same as though there was no court. It is coram non judice.” Grumon v. Raymond, 1 Conn., 40. So, because tbe jurisdiction of a court can be exercised only by tbe judge defacto of tbe court, tbe judge of a court not having jurisdiction is likened to a stranger assuming to exercise tbe jurisdiction of a court having it; tbe proceeding in both cases being coram non judice. Tbe rule as given in Fleta, following Bracton, appplies very closely to tbisjcase. It is there said, in substance, tbat no one can proceed judicially to whom regular jurisdiction has not [395]*395been delegated, by the king bimself; and that no other can control the power of the county or punish for contempt (contumacy) except one on whom judicial power has been conferred, not by a judge, but by the king himself, for that even a praetor could not substitute judges under him, because the judgments of such would be of no effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Wis. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-slyke-v-trempealeau-county-farmers-mutual-fire-insurance-wis-1876.