Court Opinion

ID: 6532130
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 20:20:18.168392+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:23.651170
License: Public Domain

OVERFIELD, District Judge.
It appears from the petition that the plaintiff did, on said 3d day of September, 1912, pay the amount of the fine imposed, and did eliminate from the affidavit theretofore filed by him the matter deemed objectionable by the commissioner, and described in his order adjudging plaintiff guilty of contempt. It is apparent, therefore, that any order or judgment that this court might make upon the return to such writ would be ineffectual to restore the plaintiff the fine paid by him, or in any way to relieve him from the effect of said judgment, and that at most such decision could only settle a moot question as to whether the commissioner had proceeded properly in the matter sought to be reviewed. Such questions courts decline to pass -upon. The petition discloses a state of facts similar to those in the following cases, wherein parties had been adjudged guilty of contempt, paid the fine adjudged, and otherwise complied with the order of the court sought to be reviewed, and the petitions for review were denied: Ellis v. People, 15 Colo. App. 341, 62 Pac. 232; Dugane v. Smith, J., 140 Iowa, 674, 119 N. W. 73.
It is not necessary to consider whether a writ of review lies under the Alaska Code in a case like this, where the party had a right of appeal. The provisions of the Code in regard to writs of review, and appeals from judgments of justices of the peace are taken from the Oregon Code as it stood prior to the amendment of 1889, allowing a writ of review concurrently with the right of appeal. While some of the earlier Oregon decisions had held that the right to a writ of review was concurrent with that of the right of appeal, it seems after-wards to have been definitely decided by the Supreme Court of that state that wherever there was a right of appeal, or such right had existed and been lost through failure to exer*624cise it within the time limited, the writ of review did not lie. Ramsey v. Pettengill, 14 Or. 207, 12 Pac. 439.
The presumption is that, in adopting the statute of Oregon, Congress intended to adopt the construction that had been placed upon it by the Supreme Court of that state, and that, if it had been intended to allow a writ of review concurrent with the right of appeal, it would have adopted and enacted the amendment of the Oregon law of 1889, and would not have adopted the law as it stood prior to such amendment.
There are matters stated in the petition which are immaterial, so far as this proceeding is concerned, but which should be considered in some other way, if the petitioner desires to present them to the court.