Union Pacific Railroad v. Wolfe
Union Pacific Railroad v. Wolfe
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In a suit entitled Spencer v. Smarsty, pending in the Justice of the Peace Court, a writ of attachment against Smqrsty was delivered to< the constable for service. In aid of this attachment, the constable issued a garnishee Summons directed to The Union Pacific Railroad Company, plaintiff in error, and attempted to serve it by reading it to, and leaving a copy with, an employe of said railroad company who was not an' officer or agent of said corporation upon whom it was. competent to make service, and thereupon returned the summons as so served upon the corporation. The company made no answer concerning its indebtedness to the defendant in the attachment suit, but entered its special appearance in the Justice Court, and moved to quash the service of the garnishee summons, because the pretended service was not lawful. This motion was denied, and thereafter, on the i8tih day of November, 1912, default judgment was rendered against the garnishee in favor of said Spencer. November 30th the company filed in the District Court its petition for writ of certiorari to remove the said cause to the District Court. The
The District Court held that service had not been made upon the railroad company, therefore the judgment was void for want of jurisdiction; that from said judgment the gar-/ nishee liad the right to appeal to the County Court, but by thus appealing it would have waived the jurisdiction of the.justice over its person. With such ruling there seems to- be no- controversy; but the court further held that the garnishee could obtain no- relief for want of jurisdiction under writ of certiorari, because that writ would not issue to-review a judgment in any case where there is an appeal, and that if the garnishee desired to contest the jurisdiction of the justice over its person, it could do so by applying for an injunction restraining the enforcement of the judgment. This ruling is assigned as error.
In this state, there are two proceedings by writ of -certiorari : One is provided for in section 297 Mills’ Ann. Code,-, section 331 Code of 1908, which we will call the code remedy; the other is provided for by general statute — Mills’ Ann.Stats. 1912, section 4402, et seq., R. S. 1908, section 3837 et seq., and will be called the statutory remedy. The code remedy is for the purpose of reviewing the'action of any inferior tribunal, board or officer exercising judicial functions, for excess of jurisdiction, or gross abuse of discretion, where there is no appeal, or, in the judgment of the court, any plain, speedy and adequate remedy. The statutory remedy is for the purpose of securing' a trial de novo of causes.previously heard by justices of the peace, where, without fault on his.
Defendants in error contend that,' as to judgments of the Justice of the-Peace, the statutory remedy is exclusive, but that, inasmuch as an appeal could have been taken from the justice of the peace in the ordinary way, certiorari would not lie under either procedure. With this contention we dp not agree, under the facts alleged. The code provision is:
“The writ shall be granted in all cases where an inferior tribunal, board or officer exercising judicial functions has exceeded its jurisdiction or greatly abused the discretion of such tribunal, board or officer, and there is no appeal, nor, in the judgment of the court, any plain, speedy and adequate remedy.”
This provision of the code has been construed in People ex rel. L’Abbe v. District Court, 26 Colo. 386, 396, 58 Pac. 604, 607, 46 L. R. A. 850, and in Paul v. Rooks, 16 Colo. App. 44, 47, 63 Pac. 711. In the former case the court said:
“The mere fact that an appeal lies to a final judgment is not conclusive against the right to issue the writ. Notwithstanding that fact, it may be granted, if, in the judgment of the court, the remedy by appeal is not plain, speedy and adequate. An appeal'is not always, and in all circumstances, adequate. The code does not mean that the writ shall not issue except when two contingencies combine, of an absence of appeal and. inadequate remedy. The language is, ‘No ap*572 peal, nor plain, speedy and adequate remedy.’ This means if, in addition to the lack of jurisdiction, either element, the absence of an appeal or inadequacy, etc., of remedy, is present, the writ' of prohibition may god’
In Paul v. Rooks, supra, the court had under consideration the effect of an appeal from a judgment in the Justice Court. As shown by the abstract and briefs, the appellant insisted that appellee's only remedy in the County Court was by certiorari, to which contention the appellee, in argument, said:
“An examination of the code section 297 discloses that it is only where there is no appeal that certiorari will lie to test the question of jurisdiction.”
In answer this, the court, by Wilson, J., at page 48 [63 Pac. 712] said:
“We do not feel called upon to suggest what remedy defendant could have had, other than by appeal, but will say that his construction of code section 297 is not in accord with the decision of the Supreme Court. People ex rel. L'Abbe v. District Court, 26 Colo. 396. It has been there held that the mere fact that an appeal lies to a final judgment is not conclusive against the right to- issue a writ of certiorari. ‘Notwithstanding that fact, it may be granted, if in the judgment of the court the remedy is not plain, speedy and adequate.’ ”
From these decisions, it is plain that if the remedy by appeal is inadequate, it is no* remedy, and gives to' a court of record under the code, proceeding the same right, and imposes upon it the same duty, to' grant writ of certiorari as if no right of appeal existed; and with this in view, the holding of the Supreme Court in Van Buren v. Posteraro, 45 Colo. 588, 593, is clearly in point. In that case the appellee urged that, inasmuch as- the action of the justice of the peace was void, injunction (which remedy she sought) was her only remedy, but the court said:
' “If the justice exceeded his authority, and the matter could not have been taken to. a higher court under § 2679 or*573 | 2692 Mills’ Ann. Stats., appellee nevertheless had a clear and proper remedy under chap. 28, Mills’ Ann. Code; Leloff v. Heath, 31 Colo. 170, 172.” [71 Pac. 1112, 1113.]
Section 2679 provides for an appeal, and section 2692 is the statutory provision 'for writ of certiorari which we have been discussing. If, as we have decided, inadequacy of remedy by appeal, or its. substitute, the statutory writ of certiorari, is the legal equivalent of the absence of a right to appeal, then the decision just cited is a clear bolding that the code remedy (section 297 Mills’, being a part of chapter' 28) is applicable to proceedings before justice of the peace, under certain conditions, and that the statutory remedy is not exclusive. In Leloff v. Heath, supra, it was held that the statutory procedure is. not exclusive, where no- remedy is provided by statute.
In support of 'his contention that the statutory remedy is exclusive, counsel for defendants in error cites Wood v. Lake, 3 Colo. App. 284, 33 Pac. 80. The court there held that the code provisions respecting writ of certiorari were not applicable; that wherever, as in that case, the act regulating the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace provides remedies when the litigant’s rights are not respected by the magistrate, those remedies must be taken toi -be exclusive, and the petition did not make the allegations required by the statute, and therefore, dismissed the writ. We may readily agree with Judge Bis-sell in his application of the law to the facts ^before him. There was no question that the justice had full jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the person of the defendant. The judgment rendered by the justice of the peace was not void; it was one. from which appeal would lie, and in which every question at issue could be raised without waiver upon appeal— that is to say, would have afforded an adequate remedy. Under those 'facts, the act regulating the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace might well be regarded as exclusive. Defendants in error also cite Holmboe v. Hermond, 52 Colo. 316, 121 Pac. 154, in which the court held that certiorari would
The defendants in error contend that the petition was not sufficient. It states facts from which it appears that the justice of the peace had exceeded his jurisdiction, or was without jurisdiction; that there was no adequate remedy by appeal, and m plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law, except certiorari. We think such' showing was sufficient. It was said that plaintiff in error had a remedy by injunction. Conceding, for the sake of argument, that there was a possible remedy by injunction, nevertheless, we think that would not deprive plaintiff in error of the right to proceed by certiorari. It is a recognized principle that the equitable jurisdiction of the court cannot be invoked where there is a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law. Certiorari presents such a remedy. Furthermore, as a general rule, injunction will not be granted to> restrain the execution of a judgment, except upon allegations and proof that the party applying therefor has a defense to the suit upon its merits — Van Buren v. Posteraro, supra.
There is a decided conflict of authority as to whether equitable relief may be granted against a void judgment, where there is a remedy at law, 'by appeal, error or certiorari— Vol. 21, Case and Comment, p. 408; note to Pickering v. Palmer, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1055, and cases cited. Our Su
The order of the District Court quashing the writ of certiorari and awarding procedendo is reversed, and the cause remanded to the District Court with instructions to- enter an order annulling the judgment of the Justice Court.
Reversed and Remanded.
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