Durfee v. District Court, First Judicial District
Durfee v. District Court, First Judicial District
Opinion of the Court
Each of the above entitled, causes is a petition for a writ of mandamus to be directed against the respondent court requiring it to take certain action. The questions involved are related and the petitions were heard together.
It appears by the papers that on November 17, 1922, the petitioner entered in the District Court of the First Judicial District his writ in an action of trespass and ejectment against the Standish-Barnes Company, a corporation, and Julia A. P. Sullivan to recover possession of a tenement in the city of Newport claimed to be let or held at will or by sufferance; that said November 17 was the entry day of said writ; that with his writ the petitioner filed in said district court his claim for jury trial in writing; that during the session of the court upon said entry day the defendant answered the case and filed the following: “The defendants hereby appear specially for the purpose of demurring to said declaration Robert M. Franklin, Defts. Atty.; “that on November 24, 1922, the cause commenced by said writ was certified to the Superior Court; that on December 4, 1922, the case was before the Superior Court upon the plaintiff’s motion to assign; that on December 6, 1922, the Superior Court denied the motion on the ground that the case was not properly before it and that the Superior Court was without jurisdiction in said case. The case and the papers were then remanded to said district court and the papers are now in the possession of said district court. These are the essential facts as far as they relate to the ■ first two of the above entitled causes and on these facts the' petitioner asks that said district court be ordered to return the papers in said case to the Superior Court, and that the *464 Superior Court be ordered “to entertain jurisdiction of said cause, to assign said case for trial, to place said case at the head of the docket immediately and to proceed with the trial of said cause.”
As to the third of the above entitled causes it appears that on December 5, 1922, the petitioner entered in the District Court of the First Judicial District his writ in an action of trespass and ejectment against the Newport Poster Advertising Company, a corporation, and Julia A. P. Sullivan for the possession of a tenement in Newport claimed to be let or held at wilt or by sufferance; that said December 5, 1922 was the entry day of said writ; that with the writ the petitioner filed in said district court his claim for jury trial in writing; that during the session of that court upon said entry day said case was answered by the defendants and the case was continued by said district court “to December 12, 1922, for hearing on demurrer.” Upon these facts the petitioner asks that said district court be ordered to certify said case forthwith to the Superior Court.
By statute each district court is given exclusive original jurisdiction “over all actions properly brought within its district for the possession of tenements or estates let or held at will or by sufferance.” Section 28, Chapter 280, General Laws, 1909. All the provisions with reference to practice in said actions, in the district courts or in the upper courts upon appellate proceedings, indicate the legislative intent to place them in a distinct class and to prevent delay in bringing them to trial and in their disposition. Many of the provisions relating to procedure in the district court, and in the superior court upon a claim for jury trial from the district court, which are pertinent to suits upon other causes of action are without application to actions of this kind; and the same can be said of the decisions of this court construing statutory provisions which have a general application to other causes arising in district' courts. While this class of cases shall proceed expeditiously to their conclusion, we should not assume that it is the intent of the statute *465 that the defendant is to be deprived of full opportunity to present any proper defence of law or of fact that he may desire to interpose, with the proviso, that it is the duty of the court firmly to insist that in the presentation of such defences there shall be no unnecessary delay.
Upon the first of the above entitled causes a writ of mandamus will issue directing the District Court of the First Judicial District to transmit at once the papers in Durfee v. Standish-Barnes Co. et al., to the Superior Court in the county of Newport.
Upon the second of the above entitled causes a writ of mandamus will issue to the Superior Court in the county of Newport directing it to entertain jurisdiction of the cause of Durfee v. Standish-Barnes Co. et al. We will not, however, by said writ direct said Superior Court as to the manner in which it shall exercise its jurisdiction in said cause.
Upon the third of the above entitled causes, a writ of mandamus will issue to the District Court of the First Judicial District directing it forthwith to certify and transmit to the Superior Court in the county of Newport the case of Durfee v. Newport Poster Advertising Co. et al., said certification to be as of the date of the entry day in said case.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Julian H. Durfee vs. District Court, First Judicial District; Julian H. Durfee vs. Superior Court; Julian H. Durfee vs. District Court, First Judicial District
- Status
- Published