Court Opinion

ID: 3412252
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 19:30:04.306288+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:51:29.183016
License: Public Domain

Defendants, having appealed from an order denying a change of place of trial, now make a motion for stay of proceedings pending that appeal. The only showing made is that the defendants moved for a change of venue *Page 156 
upon the ground that they were not residents of the county wherein the action was brought; that this motion was denied, and appeal taken therefrom, the transcript upon which is on file herein; that one of the district judges has set the case for trial; and that it will be tried, pending appeal, in the county from which the appellants sought to remove it, unless this court grants a stay of proceedings.
C. S., sec. 7162, provides that the perfection of an appeal from an order refusing to grant a change of the place of trial of an action does not stay the proceedings therein.
To grant the motion upon this meager showing would be, in effect, to hold that one who appeals from an order refusing to change the place of trial of an action is entitled to a stay of proceedings as a matter of course, in the face of that statute, and would be equivalent to granting a writ of prohibition out of this court against the district judge without such judge being made a party to the proceedings, and without any showing that such writ is necessary to the complete exercise of the appellate jurisdiction of this court. (Const., art. 5, sec. 9.)
Previous decisions of this court or from other jurisdictions, tending to support the granting of a stay of proceedings or a writ of prohibition pending an appeal from such an order, are of no particular weight in the determination. of this matter. Such decisions will be found to rest upon some showing in addition to the possible necessity of the defendant going through two trials, one of which might be avoided: that by the lower court proceeding, the complete exercise of the appellate jurisdiction of this court would be impaired; or that, because of some threatened irreparable injury, the matter in litigation should remain in statu quo until the determination of the appeal.
The motion is denied. Costs to respondent.
Wm. E. Lee, C.J., and Givens and T. Bailey Lee, JJ., concur. *Page 157