Court Opinion

ID: 7092409
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:07:23.50259+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:07.907706
License: Public Domain

Wright, J.
It is urged that the remedy of the party was by appeal from the judgment of the county court, and not by certiorari. And this is the first question demanding our attention.
*425The general provision of the statute is, that an appeal is allowed from all decisions of the county court, on the merits of any matter affecting the right, or interest of individuals, including an intermediate order involving the merits, and necessarily affecting the decree or decision, (§ 131). And then § 853, referring to this class of cases, declares that if on appeal the judgment below be sustained, (being against the accused,) it shall be rendered and entered as a judgment of the District Court. The writ of certiorari is to issue, when, in the judgment of the court applied to, there is no other plain, speedy and adequate remedy. (§ 1965.)
The writ of certiorari is not specially Authorized by law in this class of cases. An appeal is, and there is therefore a plain, speedy and adequate remedy without resorting to the writ. If the county court erred in the rejection of this testimony, the error could be and would be corrected on the trial in the District Court. The alleged illegality is not of the character contemplated by § 1965 of the Code. To thus construe the statute would render the provisions giving an appeal entirely nugatory and inoperative.
We are referred, however, to the case of Cohen v. Mahaska County, 4 G. Greene, 242. Without committing ourselves to the correctness of the ruling there made, we remark that there is a clear distinction between that case and this. There the county court, in addition to requiring security of defendant, as provided by § 852, required him to make quarterly payments to the county treasurer. This latter order it had no power or right to make. This could only done in the District Court, on appeal, when the accused was found guilty, or confessed the accusation. (§ 855.) In such a case, while there might be much plausibility in arguing that the court had acted illegally, or exceeded its proper jurisdiction, within the meaning of § 1965 of the Code, it would by no means present a precedent for the writ in this case. Here it was only claimed that the error was in re*426jecting certain testimony. This was not acting illegally within the meaning of the statute. The writ was therefore properly refused, and the judgment is
Affirmed.