Court Opinion

ID: 6736825
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 23:19:07.12372+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:48.772669
License: Public Domain

Bruce, J.
The intervener and appellant has entirely mistaken his remedy, in so far as the alleged illegality of the contract for the construction of the filtration plant is concerned. Even if it be true (and on this matter we express no opinion) that the contract for the construction of the filtration plant was illegally let, this fact in no manner justifies an intervention in the case at bar. The mandamus proceedings were brought, not to enforce any right or compel any action under the contract for the erection of the filtration plant, nor to obtain any money on such contract from the proceeds of said bonds, but merely to compel the city treasurer to sign bonds for the purpose of negotiation, which had been sold by the city of Pargo to the Minnesota Loan & Trust Company. There is a clear distinction, indeed, between a proceeding which seeks to invalidate an election to determine whether an issue of bonds shall be made, or to invalidate the bonds themselves, and a proceeding which seeks to prevent the payment of the proceeds of such bonds upon an illegal contract. Such being the case, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to permit appellant and intervener to intervene in the case and to allege and urge the invalidity of such contract. There were, however, other matters in dispute in the original action, for, although the answer of the principal defendant and respondent, Ohas. H. Mitchell, did not raise the question in so many words, the original complaint in the mandamus proceedings alleged “that at and during all the times herein mentioned, said city of Eargo has not become indebted, and is not now, and by the sale of such bonds would not become, indebted in an amount exceeding 4 per cent of the taxable property of the said city *205of Fargo as determined by the city assessment last preceding the 6th day of July, 1910, and as determined by the city assessment for the year 1911.” This was a complete allegation that the city was not indebted beyond its constitutional limit. See § 183, art. 12, Constitution of Forth Dakota. The answer of Chas. IT. Mitchell expressly stated that “his refusal to sign such bonds in his official capacity or otherwise is based upon facts heretofore set forth upon the pendency of such action, testing the validity of said contract, the proceedings leading up to it, and the issue of said bonds as aforesaid; that said action has never been determined, and, as respondent is informed and verily believes, upon consultation with counsel in reference thereto, and advised by said counsel after a full and complete investigation of the facts relating to the letting of said contract and the issue of said bonds for the construction of said filtration plant as aforesaid, such proceedings are, and all of them, absolutely void and of no effect, and that the pretended issue of said bonds in the sum of $65,000 is illegal and void and of no effect, and would create an obligation beyond the powers of the officers of said city to enter into, and of such character as would impose a personal liability upon the respondent and his bondsmen to the amount of said bond given as said city treasurer of the city oi Fargo as aforesaid for the faithful performance of his duties.” It cannot therefore be said that on these pleadings the issue of the indebtedness of the city of Fargo was not submitted to the trial court, or was not raised by the pleadings themselves. JSTor can it be said that the issue of the pending action by W. J. Price against the city of Fargo et al. was not involved or considered, as the same was specially pleaded in the answer. FTor, on the other hand, can it be said that the whole question of the validity of the election was not involved, as all of the facts relating thereto were specially pleaded in the complaint of the principal relator. The intervening petition, therefor, and proposed answer, really raised no new questions. The question, therefore, before this court, is whether, after a demurrer to the sufficiency of the an-siver has been argued to the court, the attorney for the defendant may be allowed to intervene on his own behalf and set up in his answer the same defenses which, if not especially pleaded by the defendant in chief and in the original proceeding, were necessarily involved in the issues which were presented to the court; for the rule of pleading *206must be borne in mind that a material allegation in a complaint which' is not denied or otherwise met is deemed admitted; or whether, fearing that the principal defendant will not appeal, such attorney, on his-own behalf, may intervene in order that he may himself appeal and have the questions determined by the supreme court. We believe that, he certainly could not do so as a matter of right, and that it was no-abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court to refuse him permission so to do. This is the well-established rule, indeed even in cases-where the issues sought to be presented by the intervener were not directly raised by the pleadings in the original case. Section 6825 of the North Dakota Code provides that any person may, before the trial, intervene in an action or proceeding, who has an interest in the matter in litigation, in the success of either party, or an interest against both. “An intervention ... is made by complaint setting forth the ground upon which the intervention rests, filed by leave of the court,’* etc.’ This statutory provision is the only one that we have been able to find which permits the proceeding. It is identical in its wording, if not an exact copy of § 387 of the Code of Oivil Procedure of California, and is a re-enactment of § 90 of the Code of Civil Procedure of 1877 of the territory of Dakota. It is also, to all intents and purposes, a codification of the general rules of procedure upon the subject which have generally prevailed throughout the United States. See 123 Am. St. Rep. 280, note, et seq. In California, in the territory of Dakota, and everywhere, as far as we are able to ascertain, it has been held that the right, to be exercised as a matter of right, must be claimed before the trial, and that, even if the trial court has the right to permit its exercise .after the beginning of the trial, it is not an abuse of discretion for him to refuse his permission. Especially should this be the rule where, as in the case at bar, the petitioner knows that the issues he seeks to raise will not be urged, and we should remember that in this case the intervener expressly states that prior to the trial his client (the principal defendant) refused to himself question the validity of the election or of the bond issue. “The said Mitchell,” he said, “. . . instructed your petitioner as his counsel ... to draw an answer setting up, and only setting up, the pendency of an action by W. J. Price against the city of Fargo et al.; that your petitioner repeatedly called Mr. Mitchell’s attention to the fact that the validity *207of the said bonds was not attacked in said answer, and said Mitchell has refused to attack the validity of the said bonds.” It is perfectly clear, indeed, that before the trial he was fully cognizant that the validity of the election and of the bond issue would not be urged with the consent of his client. The language of the supreme court of the territory of Dakota in the case of Gale v. Frasier, 4 Dak. 196, 30 N. W. 138, 141, is applicable here. “The next step in the proceeding,” the court said, “was a motion and petition of Margaret Frazier in intervention [and], asking to be made a party defendant, and seeking by her complaint to be adjudged a trustee of said lands for the use and benefit of the said defendant, Byron M. Smith. This application was presented by her attorneys, Boyce & Boyce, some of whom had been from the commencement of the proceedings attorneys for the defendant, Smith. . . . Was Margaret Frazier’s application made in time ? 'An intervention takes place when a third person is permitted to become a party to an action or proceeding between other persons/ and is made by complaint setting forth the ground upon which the intervention [rests], 'filed by leave of the court/ etc. Code of Civil Procedure, § 90. The corresponding provision in the California Code is identical with our own. Iowa is similar, except no leave of court is first to be obtained. In that state the complaint in intervention may be filed as a matter of right before trial by any person claiming to have an interest in the matter in litigation; the complaint, of course, subject to all legal objections the same as any other pleading in the case. We must therefore conclude that this power of permission or refusal was vested in the court by the statute makers for some purpose. Hone is apparent, unless it be for one of the three reasons presented by the above proposition, viz., that the complaint does not state a proper case for intervention; or, second, that the facts are so imperfectly set forth in the complaint that a cause of action is not presented thereby; or, third, that the application to the court for leave to intervene was not seasonably made. As the first two of these propositions could be taken advantage of after the application had been permitted by the court, either by demurrer or a motion to strike from the files, we are led irresistibly to the conclusion that the sound discretion of the court was to be exercised when required by the last. It is unfortunate, to say the least, but the evidence is abundant in all courts *208that litigants with great interests involved are often, by one pretext or another, compelled to submit to vexatious delays in the judicial determination of their rights. To remedy this evil, stringent legislation is sometimes enacted; exhaustive and rigorous rules of court are often adopted. Notwithstanding these, the exercise of the sound discretion which is always vested in the court is very often invoked and exercised by that tribunal in the proper administration of the law. No doubt can be entertained but that a correct interpretation of the statute under consideration is that, if the court was satisfied that any object was sought to be attained other than the proper and speedy adjustment of the matter in controversy, the application for intervention might safely be denied, and the applicant refused [permission] to become a party in the determination of issues which other parties were submitting for judicial adjustment. It may, however, be safely admitted that an abuse of discretion by the trial court would be error; and, while we are not disposed to seriously question the proposition of the learned counsel for the appellant that ‘intervention under the Dakota Code is not the mere discretionary privilege grudgingly bestowed, . . . but is a right to be freely exercised,’ yet. we are of the opinion that it is a right which must be exercised with reasonable diligence, rather than a right which may be toyed with at pleasure, and exercised ■[as a] dernier resort, for the purpose either of gaining additional time or forcing an opponent to meet issues which are suddenly thrust upon him by'an entire stranger to the case. . . . If it was so essential to the interest of defendant, Smith, that Margaret Frazier be allowed to come to his assistance, it is somewhat remarkable that it should not be discovered before the cause was called in court for trial. If Smith elected not to adopt the course heretofore suggested, and failed to cite or notify Margaret Frazier to appear and protect him and defend her covenants, we think she was bound to act promptly in the other course. This she did not do. The application under the circumstances came too late, and the court, in the exercise of the discretionary power conferred by the statute, committed no error in denying the motion.” See also Pinkard v. Willis, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 69, 57 S. W. 892; Hibernia Sav. & L. Soc. v. Churchill, 128 Cal. 633, 79 Am. St. Rep. 73, 61 Pac. 279, 280; Gale v. Frazier, 4 Dak. 196, 30 N. W. 141, affirmed in 144 U. S. 509, 36 L. ed. 521, 12 Sup. Ct. *209Rep. 674; Alley v. Nott, 111 U. S. 472, 28 L. ed. 491, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 495; State ex rel. Montana C. R. Co. v. District Ct. 32 Mont. 37, 79 Pac. 546.
We do not wish to be understood as intimating our belief that the intervener in this case sought to intervene for the purpose of delay. We believe, indeed, that he acted in the utmost good faith, and from the highest of motives. We are nevertheless of the opinion that his request was unreasonably delayed, and that the court did not abuse its discretion in refusing its permission. The case of Gale v. Frazier, which we have just cited, offers, indeed, a much stronger pretext for intervention than does the one at bar, for in it, though the right to intervene was asked some nineteen months after the issuance of the summons and after what appeared to the court to. be an unreasonable delay, it was nevertheless asserted before the trial could, in any sense of the word, have been said to have begun. Iiere the right was sought after a demurrer had been interposed to the answer and the argument had been had thereon. In the case of Alley v. Nott, 111 U. S. 472, 28 L. ed. 491, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 495, it was held that a general demurrer to a complaint raised an issue which, when tried, would finally dispose of the case as stated in the complaint, on its merits, unless leave to amend or plead over was granted, and that the argument of such a demurrer was a trial of the action within the meaning of the act of 1875 in regard to the removal of causes. In that case the state court decided the issue against the plaintiff upon the demurrer, but, before entering final judgment, granted a new trial with leave to amend the pleadings. It was held that it was too late to remove the cause. “The trial of such an issue,” the court said, “is the trial of the cause as a cause, and not the settlement of a mere matter of form in proceeding.” We are aware of the fact that in a number of cases, noticeably those of Lipscomb v. State, 76 Miss. 253, 25 So. 158, and State v. Kent (State v. Pancoast) 5 N. D. 516, 25 L.R.A. 518, 67 N. W. 1052, it has been held that the trial of an action does not begin until the impaneling of the jury. Practically all, if not all, of these cases, however, are criminal cases, where the final determination of the issues is for the jury, and not the court. In a mandamus proceeding, on the other hand, the final determination is for the court. There is no jury, and a determination of a demurrer would, unless the court granted *210leave to amend, be conclusive of the case, and the argument on the demurrer involved the whole of the trial. We also realize that a number of authorities state that the trial begins “after all dilatory proceedings have been overcome.” See Lipscomb v. State, supra. A general demurrer in a mandamus proceeding, however, which settles the whole point in controversy in the litigation, can hardly be said to be a dilatory plea. The main reason for the intervention in this case was that the interveners might be allowed to appeal from the ruling on the demurrer, and thus have the points in controversy definitely settled by the supreme court. So far this court has not conclusively passed upon the identical question before us, and as to when the trial of an action in mandamus cases may be said to have begun. It has, however, on several occasions, considered the question in other proceedings, and the inference from the cases is, we think, clear. See Gale v. Frazier, 4 Dak. 196, 30 N. W. 138; State v. Kent, supra; Second Nat. Bank v. First Nat. Bank, 8 N. D. 50, 76 N. W. 504; State v. Hazledahl, 2 N. D. 521, 16 L.R.A. 150, 52 N. W. 315; Walker v. Maronda, 15 N. D. 63, 106 N. W. 296. We are quite satisfied that in a mandamus proceeding at any rate, where the issues are tried by the court, and not by the jury, the trial has been begun when a general demurrer has been argued. In any event we are of the opinion that the court did not abuse its discretion in this case.
We have so far dealt with the question of the discretion of the trial judge. We are in serious doubt, however, whether he had any discretion in the premises at all. The statute on the subject is explicit. “Any person may before trial intervene,” it says, and nowhere is there to be found any provision in the statute for an extension of this time. We have cited authorities which would lead us to believe that the trial has begun when a demurrer has been interposed and argued. In addition to these authorities we call attention to the provisions of our statute. Section 1008, Bev. Codes 1905, provides that “a trial is a judicial examination of the issues between the parties, whether they are issues of law or of fact,” while § 1005 provides that “an issue of law arises upon a demurrer to the complaint, answer, or reply, or to some part thereof.” We are seriously in doubt, indeed, whether the trial court had really any discretion, and whether his discretion did not merely extend to deciding whether'the right of intervention should *211be allowed before the trial, and that, after tbe trial bad once begun, that discretion was not over. It seems to ns, indeed, that, in order to confer upon a trial court tbe right to allow an intervention after tbe argument of a demurrer, we must ourselves judicially legislate, and say that when tbe legislature said “before trial,” it meant “at any time before tbe final judgment.”
Tbe judgment of tbe District Court is affirmed.