Corcoran v. District Court
Opinion of the Court
This case was instituted in this court by the -filing of a petition averring, in substance, that the petitioner is the plaintiff in an action pending in the District Court for the First Division of the District of Alaska, and “that said District Court refuses to hear or determine said action,” and will continue to refuse unless compelled to hear and determine said case, and praying for a writ of mandamus. To an order of this court, requiring the District Court to show cause, if any there be, why the writ should not issue, a.return has been made by the judge of that court, by which it appears that the petitioner, while absent from Alaska, has
The case has been argued in behalf of the petitioner, and submitted on a demurrer to said return. As the return is a complete traverse of the accusing part of the petition, the case appears to be destitute of merit. By compliance with the rules of practice the petitioner could have had his case tried and determined, and all of his legal rights protected, in accordance with the jurisprudence of the country. Even now, errors of the respondent court, if any have been committed to his prejudice, may be corrected by the court having appellate jurisdiction; but a writ of error, instead of the extraordinary writ of mandamus, must be sued out in the manner prescribed by law, in order to invoke appellate jurisdiction.
Demurrer overruled, and case dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CORCORAN v. DISTRICT COURT FOR DISTRICT OF ALASKA DIVISION NO. 1
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published