Court Opinion

ID: 3491659
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:00:00.913782+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:14:32.214899
License: Public Domain

In the course of protracted litigation involving real estate, Lewis M. Dickens, who claimed to be interested, under a trust mortgage, and without title, executed a mortgage on the property to Alfred J. Brandimore for $650,000. Brandimore filed the bill herein to foreclose the mortgage and have a receiver appointed. Dickens filed consent to the appointment of a receiver. Upon the bill and such *Page 130 
consent, without notice to persons in possession or interest, a receiver was appointed under a bond of $100, and at once assumed possession. The next morning, attorneys representing parties dispossessed by thge receiver appeared in court and informed the judge of the invaded rights of their clients and the impropriety of the appointment of the receiver. The judge sent for the plaintiff's attorney, and he appeared and objected to any action without formal appearance by such attorneys in the case and notice to him of their purpose in appearing before the court. The court summarily heard the matter, and, finding he had improvidently appointed the receiver, set aside the appointment.
Plaintiff asks us to direct the circuit judge to vacate the order discharging the receiver.
The appointment of the receiver was highly improvident, and had the judge been informed of the situation, the appointment would not have been made. Attorneys are officers of the court, and there was propriety in the attorneys informing, the judge of the error he had been led to commit.
The rule of notice, invoked by plaintiff, did not prevent the judge from summarily revoking the improvident appointment. The judge, in such an instance, may act on his own motion and correct a palpable wrong, and his hand is not stayed by invoked formality tending to prolong duration of the wrong. The receiver was inadvertently appointed, and the appointment was rightly revoked.
The order vacating the appointment of the receiver is affirmed, with costs.
CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, and FEAD, JJ., concurred. BUTZEL, C.J., did not sit. *Page 131