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  • pears by 12 Co. 24. and the cases there cited. True it is,

that if a justice of(a) peace issue his warrant to imprison the party, or to arrest him until such time as he can be brought before him, or if the commissioners of bankrupts commit a witness for refusing to be examined(a) it may be determined in an action, whether they have pursued their authority or not; for their act in this respect is only ministerial;(b) and the commitment is not intended as a punishment, but only as a mesne process to bring the party to justice, or to make him do his duty. My Lord Coke, it is true, says in Dr. Bonham's case, 8 Co. 121 a. that the cause of commitment was traversable; but this opinion was there given obiter, and was not essential to the case in judgment; for there the question was, for practising without the licence of the college, for which the party could not be imprisoned; and Dr. Bonham being a graduate in the university, my Lord Coke was carried away by his affection to his Alma Mater so far as to make a resolution in the present point, which was not in the case before him: but my Lord Coke says, that upon a conviction by the censors, they ought to make a record of it, which admits they are judges of record; and then by his own rule there in the case of a justice of peace who made a conviction of a force, and the cases in his other works, their acts (the acts of the justices of the peace) cannot be traversed; and my Lord Coke does not cite any authority in support of his opinion (as to the point now before us) The reason which he gives why the party has no remedy by writ of error or otherwise is of no weight: I grant that a writ of error lies not; for the censors having a new authority by a special act of parliament and their proceedings being directed to be in a summary way there is no need for them to pursue the forms and methods of others courts; and it is sufficient for them to make such summary proceeding as justices of the peace in many cases may do; yet the party is not without remedy for he may have a Certiorari to remove the record of conviction, and then it may be examined and reviewed, to see whether it be