Wightman v. Karsner

20 Ala. 446
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 20 Ala. 446 (Wightman v. Karsner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wightman v. Karsner, 20 Ala. 446 (Ala. 1852).

Opinion

LIGrON, J.

Tbe charge of tbe court below, which is here assigned for error, proceeds upon tbe assumption, that tbe special term of tbe Court of Commissioners of Revenue and Roads for tbe county of Lauderdale, at which tbe claim of Henry was audited and allowed, was held without authority of law, and consequently its acts were coram nonjudice and void.

If tbe Court of Commissioners of Revenue and Roads, at tbe session at which this claim was audited and allowed, was clothed with all tbe attributes necessary to give it jurisdiction, tbe manner of its exercise is certainly regular in this instance.

Jurisdiction, wben applied to courts, is defined to be tbe power to bear and determine tbe cause. But, before a court of bmited jurisdiction will be sustained in its action, even in cases in which, by tbe law creating it, it bad full power to bear and determine, it must be shown by tbe record, that every preliminary required by law has been complied with before it acted. 18 Ala. Rep. 694, and authorities there cited. That tbe Court of Commissioners of Revenue and Roads is tbe creature of tbe statute, and one of limited authority or jurisdiction, has been several times ruled by this court. 18 Ala. Rep. 694; ib. 482. One essential ingredient to tbe exercise of jurisdiction by any court, for tbe sessions of which a time is appointed by law, is, that it act within the time prescribed, and should it fail to do so, or presume to act at another anda different time, such acts are absolutely void. Cullum v. Casey, 1 Ala. Rep. 351; 27 Maine Rep. 114; 2 Scammon, 227; 1 ib. 555.; 3 Blackf. 501. In the case before us, tbe claim on which the suit is founded, appears to have been audited and allowed, at a “ special term" of Commissioners’ Court, held on the 4th of April, 1849; and tbe question arises, bad that court authority of law to bold such a session ? It is entitled in tbe record, a “special term,” as contra-distinguished from [452]*452a-regular or adjourned term of tbe court. By tbe former, we understand a term appointed by tbe presiding officer or officers, beld at an unusual time, for tbe transaction of some particular business. By tbe latter is meant, a term begun at tbe time appointed by law, and continued, at tbe discretion of tbe court, to sucb time as it may appoint, consistent witb law. We have sought our statutes in vain, for authority in tbe Courts of Commissioners of Bevenue and Boads, to bold special terms of tbeir courts, except for fixed purposes named in tbe acts giving sucb authority. By tbe 28th section of tbe act of 1821, four Commissioners of Bevenue and Boads are directed to be elected for each county, two of whom, witb tbe judge of tbe County, (now Probate) Court, shall constitute a court, whose powers and duties are defined. Clay’s Digest, 149, § 1. By tbe first section of tbe same act, as amended by tbe act of 1824, tbe terms of these courts are appointed to be beld on tbe first Mondays in December, February, and May, and third Monday in August. Clay’s Dig. 149, § 2. In none of tbe acts concerning this court, before tbe act of 1848, is any other direction, given for tbe bolding of its terms, except, in tbe revenue laws of tbe State, a special term has sometimes been directed to be beld, for tbe sole purpose of levying tbe county tax, but from these, no authority to bold a term like tbe one we are now considering, can possibly be derived.

But it is contended, that by tbe sixth section of tbe act of 1848, entitled “ an act to reform tbe evils arising from local legislation,” (Sess. Acts, 1848, p. 100), it was intended to confer tbe power of bolding'special terms upon tbe Commissioners of Bevenue and Boads, and that in tbeir capacity as sucb, without assembling as a court, on any day regularly appointed by law for that purpose, they may appoint tbe time for bold-ing tbeir courts, and sucb appointments will be good, and tbe terms beld pursuant to it will be both legal and regular. Several reasons, too important to be disregarded, forbid us from adopting this construction of that act.

In tbe first place, before tbe passage of that act, tbe General Assembly was repeatedly annoyed witb applications from tbe several counties in tbe State, for acts to authorize tbe Commissioners’ Courts of some one county to bold one or [453]*453more of its regular terms at periods of time different from those fixed by the general law. The acts of that body, before 1848, and even during the session of that year, show that such applications were granted, and laws passed pursuant to them. The leading object, then, of the General Assembly, in tbe passage of the act referred to, was correctly set forth in its caption, and must be held to be, to give authority to the Commissioners’ Court, while sitting as such, to order its regular terms to be held at times different from those fixed by the act of 1824, above referred to. This would free the General Assembly from the necessity, in future, of passing acts for this purpose.

That it was not intended to confer the power to appoint a term of their court on the Commissioners of Eevenue and Eoads, in their individual capacity, we think, will sufficiently appear, from an examination of the several sections of the act itself. By the fifth section of the act, power is given to “the Commissioners of Eevenue and Eoads” whenever it may be necessary to levy a tax for county purposes, to levy it. The same careless phraseology is employed in the sixth section, which confers the power to alter the terms of their' court, when the public convenience may require. The General Assembly could not have intended to clothe the Commissioners, in their individual capacity, with the powers enumerated in the fifth section of the act, nor can we suppose they designed to employ the same phrase, in a different sense in the sixth section; in both places it should be understood as though it read, “the Court of Commissioners of Eevenue and Roads,” &c.

Our conclusion is, that the special term of the Commissioners’ Court of Lauderdale county, at which the claim on which plaintiff’s motion is founded was audited and allowed, was not held at a time authorized by law, and consequently its proceedings were coram non judice, and void.

2. Having seen that the proceedings of the court, at which the claim of the plaintiff was audited and allowed, were void for want of jurisdiction, it only remains to be seen whether the defendant could avail himself of it in a collateral proceeding. As far as our search has extended, the best authorities on the subject concur in saying, that a judgment void in one court, is not binding upon any other court, in which an in[454]*454terest arising- under it is sought to be enforced. If the proceedings were merely irregular or erroneous, and liable to be set .aside on appeal or writ of error, the ease would be different.

The cases of Davison and another v. Gill, (1 East. 64) and Welch v. Nash, (8 East. 394) were both actions of trespass guare clausum fregit, brought by the owners of land, against persons for shutting up an old, and opening a new, foot-path through the premises of the plaintiffs, and the defendants sought to justify by an order of the justices of the peace under the statute (13 Geo. 3, c. 78, § 19) which gave such justices jurisdiction over the subject matter, and pointed out the manner in which it should be called into action, and exercised ; and in both these cases the court permitted the plaintiff to show that the orders, under which the defendants acted, were not.

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20 Ala. 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wightman-v-karsner-ala-1852.