The County Court in the County of Cochise, created and
established by the Legislature of Arizona by the Act of March 12,
1885, is an inferior court within the meaning of Rev.Stat. § 1908,
which provides that: "The judicial power of Arizona shall be vested
in a supreme court and such inferior courts as the legislative
council may by law prescribe," and the Act of March 12, 1885, is
valid.
This was a petition to this Court for a writ of habeas corpus.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 118 U. S. 114
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner is detained in the territorial prison of Arizona
upon a warrant of commitment issued by the County Court of Cochise
County, under a sentence of imprisonment on a conviction of the
crime of grand larceny, and the only question presented by his
petition is whether the Territorial Legislature of Arizona had
authority to create and establish that court. There is no question
of the jurisdiction of the court to try the petitioner for the
offense of which he was convicted if the court itself was
rightfully created.
The provisions of the Revised Statutes on which the question
depends are these:
"§ 1846. The legislative power in each territory shall be vested
in the governor and a legislative assembly. The legislative
assembly shall consist of a council and House of
Representatives."
"§ 1851. The legislative power of every territory shall extend
to all rightful subjects of legislation not inconsistent with the
Constitution and laws of the United States."
"§ 1864. The supreme court of every territory shall consist of a
chief justice and two associate justices, any two of whom shall
constitute a quorum. . . . They shall hold a term annually at the
seat of government of the territory for which they are respectively
appointed."
"§ 1865. Every territory shall be divided into three judicial
districts, and a district court shall be held in each district of
the territory by one of the justices of the supreme court at such
time and place as may be prescribed by law, and each judge, after
assignment, shall reside in the district to which be is
assigned."
"§ 1868. The supreme court and the district courts,
respectively, of every territory shall possess chancery as well as
common law jurisdiction."
"§ 1869. Writs of error, bills of exceptions, and appeals shall
be allowed in all cases from the final decisions of the
Page 118 U. S. 115
district courts to the Supreme Court of the territories,
respectively, under such regulations as may be prescribed by
law."
"§ 1907. The judicial power in New Mexico, Utah, Washington,
Colorado, Dakota, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming shall be vested in a
supreme court, district courts, probate courts, and in justices of
the peace."
"§ 1908. The judicial power of Arizona shall be vested in a
supreme court and such inferior courts as the legislative council
may by law prescribe."
"§ 1866. The jurisdiction, both appellate and original, of the
courts provided for in §§ 1907 and 1908 shall be limited by
law."
Such was the organic law of Arizona, as shown by the Revised
Statutes, on the 12th of March, 1885, when the act was passed by
the legislative assembly of the territory and approved by the
governor, "to create and establish a county court in the County of
Cochise." Section 4 of this act is as follows:
"SEC. 4. Said county court shall be a court of record, having a
seal with the coat of arms of the territory and 'County Court,
Cochise County, Arizona,' sunk or engraved thereon, and said county
court shall have original, general, criminal, and civil
jurisdiction except as hereafter limited, and shall have equal
concurrent common law, equitable, and statutory jurisdiction with
the district courts in all cases. The County Court of said Cochise
County shall have original concurrent jurisdiction with the
district courts in all cases of equity, and in all cases at law
which involve the title or possession of real property, or the
legality of any tax, impost, assessment, toll, or municipal fine,
and in all other cases in which the demand or the value of the
property in controversy amounts to one hundred dollars or more, and
in all criminal cases amounting to felony, and cases of misdemeanor
not otherwise provided for; of all actions of forcible entry and
detainer; of proceedings in insolvency; of actions to prevent or
abate a nuisance; of all matters of probate; of divorce and for
annulment of marriage and all matters incidental thereto or
connected therewith, and of all such special cases and proceedings
as are not otherwise
Page 118 U. S. 116
provided for, and said court shall have the power of
naturalization, and to issue papers therefor. Said county courts
shall have appellate jurisdiction in all cases arising in justices
and other inferior courts in said Cochise County in the same manner
and to the same extent as is now allowed by law on appeals from
such courts to the district courts. The said county court of
Cochise County shall be always open, legal holidays and nonjudicial
days excepted, and its process shall extend to all parts of the
territory,
provided that all actions for the recovery of
the possession of, quieting the title to, or for the enforcement of
liens upon real estate shall be commenced in the county in which
the real estate or any part thereof affected by such action or
actions, is situated. Said county court, and the judge thereof,
shall have power to issue writs of mandamus, certiorari,
injunction, prohibition,
quo warranto, and habeas corpus
on petition by or on behalf of any person in actual custody in said
Cochise County. Injunctions, writs of prohibition, and habeas
corpus may be issued and served on legal holidays and nonjudicial
days, and all acts and parts of acts granting and conferring
jurisdiction to and upon the district courts, and describing their
civil and criminal procedure, shall be, and is here made,
applicable to the County Court of Cochise County. Appeals shall be
taken from the county court to the supreme court of this territory
in the same manner, and in the same cases, as are now allowed by
law in appeals from the district and probate courts to the supreme
court."
The judge of the court was to be elected by the qualified
electors of the county and to hold his office for four years. He
was to reside at the county seat, and could not be absent from the
county more than thirty days in each calendar year.
The precise question for determination is whether such a court,
with such a jurisdiction, is an "inferior court" within the meaning
of § 1908. It has "equal concurrent common law, equitable, and
statutory jurisdiction with the district courts in all cases," and
"original concurrent jurisdiction with the district courts . . . in
all criminal cases amounting to felony, and cases of misdemeanor
not otherwise provided for." It is
Page 118 U. S. 117
therefore a court of substantially equal dignity and importance
with the district court so far as Cochise County is concerned, but
it is "inferior" to the supreme court, because that court has power
to review its judgments and decrees on appeal. As every territory
is, by the Revised Statutes, to be divided into districts and a
district court is to be held in each district, § 1908 must be so
construed as not to exclude district courts in Arizona Territory.
Still, as district courts are neither named nor specifically
referred to in the section, it does not necessarily follow that the
"inferior courts" provided for must be courts inferior to them. For
some reason, Congress saw fit, in establishing the territorial
government of Arizona, to depart from its usual habit of specifying
the courts in which the judicial power should be vested, and to
provide that it should be vested there "in a supreme court, to
consist of three judges, and such inferior courts as the
legislative council may by law prescribe." Chapter 56, § 2, 12
Stat. 665. In all the other territories then existing, it had been
vested "in a supreme court, district courts, probate courts, and in
justices of the peace." This practice began with the act
establishing the territorial government of Wisconsin, April 20,
1836, 5 Stat. 10, c. 54, § 9, and it was followed in all the
territorial organic acts passed afterwards except in those for
Arizona and Alaska. In Arizona, the provision as to the vesting of
judicial power was more like that in the Organic Act of Florida,
March 30, 1822, 3 Stat. 654, c. 13, § 6, where it was placed "in
two superior courts, and in such inferior courts and justices of
the peace as the legislative council of the territory may from time
to time establish." This, it was held in
American
Ins. Co. v. Canter, 1 Pet. 511, gave the
legislative council authority to establish courts of concurrent
jurisdiction with the superior courts except in respect to capital
offenses, as to which, by the organic act, the jurisdiction of the
superior courts had been made exclusive. The language of Chief
Justice Marshall is, p.
26 U. S.
544:
"This general grant is common to the superior and inferior
courts, and their jurisdiction is concurrent except so far as it
may be made exclusive in either by other provisions of the statute.
The jurisdiction of the superior courts is declared to be exclusive
over capital offenses;
Page 118 U. S. 118
on every other question over which those courts may take
cognizance by virtue of this section, concurrent jurisdiction may
be given to the inferior courts."
This is, as it seems to us, equally applicable to the present
case. The legislative power of the territory extends to "all
rightful subjects of legislation not inconsistent with the
Constitution and laws of the United States." This includes the
establishment of "inferior courts" -- that is to say, courts
inferior to the supreme court. District courts have been
established by Congress, but Congress has not defined their
jurisdiction further than to provide generally that they shall have
chancery as well as common law jurisdiction. According to § 1886,
the jurisdiction of all the courts is to be such as shall be
limited by law. There is no restraint on the legislative power of
this territory as to the grant of jurisdiction to the inferior
courts, except by implication that it shall be such as properly
belongs to a court inferior to the supreme court. In
Ferris v.
Higley, 20 Wall. 383, it was held in respect to a
territory where the judicial power was vested in a supreme court,
district courts, probate courts, and justices of the peace, that
the probate courts could not be vested by the territorial
legislature with the powers of courts of general jurisdiction, both
civil and criminal, because that would be inconsistent with the
nature and purpose of a probate court as authorized by that act and
inconsistent with the clause which conferred on the supreme court
and district courts general jurisdiction in chancery as well as at
law. But here, there is nothing of the kind. All that is required,
according to the doctrine of
American Ins. Co. v. Canter,
is that the court shall be inferior to the supreme court. Its
jurisdiction may be made concurrent with that of every other court
which is alike inferior to the supreme court. Section 1869 provides
for appeals and writs of error from the district courts to the
supreme court, but this is not at all inconsistent with authority
in the Legislature of Arizona to allow like appeals and writs of
error from any other inferior court it may establish. District
courts are now established in all the territories, but it is, to
say the least, doubtful whether that was done by Congress in
Arizona prior to the adoption of the Revised Statutes. As has
already been seen, the original
Page 118 U. S. 119
organic act contained no such provision in express terms, and it
is not necessary now to decide what effect the extension to that
territory of the legislative enactments, etc., of New Mexico may
have had on this subject. At the first session of the Territorial
Legislature of Arizona in 1864, such courts were established and
their jurisdiction defined. Howell Code, c. 45, pt. 3. At the same
time the territory was divided into three judicial districts, the
judges of the supreme court assigned for district court purposes,
and the times and places for holding such courts fixed. From that
time until now, district courts have actually existed in the
territory, and it is not now important to inquire by what
particular authority. The territorial legislature had power before
the adoption of the Revised Statutes to create courts of concurrent
jurisdiction with the district courts, and this power was not taken
away by the revision.
Something was said in argument about the use of the word
"prescribe" in the Organic Act of Arizona, and "establish" in that
of Florida, but we attach no importance to this. The words are
often used to express the same thing, and Webster classes them as
synonyms.
We are therefore of opinion that the act establishing the county
court is valid, and that the writ should be denied. Congress has
power, under § 1856 of the Revised Statutes, to disapprove the act
and thus render it inoperative thereafter, and it is to be presumed
this will be done if in its practical operation the court shall be
found to be no longer desirable. There may be now no good reason
for keeping up the distinction between the power of the Territory
of Arizona over its courts and that of the other territories, but
this is a subject for congressional legislation, and not for
judicial restraint.
The rule is discharged, and the
rit of habeas corpus denied.