Court Opinion

ID: 3839707
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:08:45.493654+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:17.270065
License: Public Domain

IN BANC.
Suit by E.J. Abrahamson and others against the Northwestern Pulp  Paper Company and others. From a judgment for defendants, plaintiffs appeal.
APPEAL DISMISSED. OPINION ADHERED TO ON REHEARING.
In this case more than one hundred and twenty-five plaintiffs filed suit against the Northwestern Pulp  Paper Company, an Oregon corporation, and certain of its directors, for the recovery of money on account of the alleged fraudulent sale of stock by that corporation to plaintiffs. The amended complaint alleges, in substance, that, in order to induce the plaintiffs and the public at large to purchase the stock, the defendants caused to be circulated among prospective purchasers of the stock throughout the state of Oregon a prospectus which contained false and fraudulent representations, among them the following, against which the plaintiffs' complaint is chiefly directed: *Page 341 
"The purpose of this issue is to furnish the working capital, as the entire major financing for the construction of the pulp mills, utility mills and by-products plant has been completed and contracted for by Eastern financiers."
The plaintiffs averred that this representation was wholly false and known to be false by all of the defendants, for the reason that, in truth and in fact, no contract had been entered into by the defendants with Eastern financiers for the major financing of the mills mentioned therein. They alleged that the defendant corporation had sold over two hundred thousand dollars worth of stock and collected over two hundred thousand dollars from stock subscriptions, which money was expended, but that the mills were never built. They further alleged that upon discovering the fraud they made demand upon the defendants for the return of the moneys paid by them, which demand was disregarded by the defendants. The plaintiffs tendered into court the stock so issued to them, and prayed for an accounting as to the amount due to them, for a judgment for $89,675, i.e., the amount involved in the suit, and asked "that the court appoint a receiver to collect said judgment and distribute the money collected thereon to plaintiffs in accord with their respective pro rata interests therein."
The purchases of the several plaintiffs were made on different dates, in varying amounts, but on the same form of contract. Attached to the amended complaint is an exhibit designated Exhibit C, which sets out the amount of money paid for stock by each individual plaintiff, and indicates the character of the stock and the number of the stock certificate representing the stock purchased by each. *Page 342 
Defendants Herman Kolberg, Northwestern Pulp  Paper Company, Robert T. Jacobs, Charles W. Miller and B.T. McBain, all answered separately and denied generally except as to certain admissions of formal matter. Defendants Frank Patton, G. Clyde Fulton and Amadee M. Smith moved to strike plaintiff's amended complaint, on the ground that it alleged more than one cause of suit not separately stated. The motion to strike was granted, and the plaintiffs were allowed up to and including September 21, 1931, in which to file a second amended complaint, but they elected to stand on the first and appeal to this court.
On their appeal the plaintiffs assign error of the court in striking out their amended complaint, and particularly in striking that pleading as to defendants that had answered.
It is asserted by certain of the defendants that the plaintiffs' appeal is premature and should be dismissed for the alleged reason that no appealable order has been entered. They contend that the order of the court striking out the plaintiffs' complaint and allowing them to amend is not a final order and therefore not appealable.
If the order of the trial court is not appealable, this court is without jurisdiction to determine the cause upon the merits. It therefore becomes necessary first to determine when an order is appealable. In this connection we direct attention to section 7-501, Oregon Code 1930, which reads:
"A judgment or decree may be reviewed on appeal as prescribed in this chapter and not otherwise. An order affecting a substantial right, and which in effect determines the action or suit so as to prevent a judgment or decree therein, or an interlocutory decree in a suit for the partition of real property, defining the *Page 343 
rights of the parties to the suit and directing sale or partition, or a final order affecting a substantial right, and made in a proceeding after judgment or decree, or an order setting aside a judgment and granting a new trial, for the purpose of being reviewed on appeal, shall be deemed a judgment or decree * * *."
The question of the right of appeal as set down in our Code has many times been the subject of discussion and controversy in this jurisdiction. It was thoroughly digested in Carmichael v.Carmichael, 101 Or. 172 (199 P. 385), and in delivering our opinion in that case we quoted with approval the following excerpt from 17 Standard Procedure, 658-660:
"The test of the jurisdiction of the court to grant relief is not whether good cause for granting the relief exists, but whether the tribunal assuming to act had power to enter upon the inquiry in the particular case or grant relief for any cause, and this must be sought for in the general nature of the powers of the court or the general laws defining its jurisdiction. It does not depend upon whether its conclusion in the course of it is right or wrong, nor whether its methods were regular * * *. The jurisdiction of the subject matter of any controversy in any court must be determined in the first instance by the allegations in the complaint or petition, as the case may be, made in good faith, and does not depend upon the existence of sustainable cause of action, or upon the evidence subsequently adduced. Jurisdiction is the power to consider and decide one way or the other, as the law may require."
If this court is without jurisdiction, it is not empowered by law to enter upon the inquiry.
In the Carmichael case, supra, we further held:
"The right of appeal is limited by law, and the cases in which appeals may be taken, and the methods of procedure therein, are such only as the law provides. *Page 344 
Clay v. Clay, 56 Or. 538, 541 (108 P. 119, 109 P. 129); State v. Security Savings Co., 28 Or. 410, 417 (43 P. 162); School District v. Irwin, 34 Or. 431, 436 (56 P. 413); Kadderly v. Portland, 44 Or. 118 (74 P. 710, 75 P. 222); Hansen v. Robbins,80 Or. 659 (157 P. 1112, 158 P. 503); In re Waters of Chewaucan River, 89 Or. 659 (171 P. 402, 175 P. 421); Smith Securities Co. v. Multnomah County, 98 Or. 418 (192 P. 654, 194 P. 428)."
In the earlier case of Bowman v. Holman, 48 Or. 351
(86 P. 792), the court, in passing upon the question, expressly stated:
"The statute provides that an appeal may be taken from a `final order affecting a substantial right' made after judgment or decree. B.  C. Comp., § 547. The order in question is not of that character. It is not a final order * * *." (Citing authorities.)
As to what constitutes a "final order affecting a substantial right," see the recent case of Talbot  Casey, Inc., v. Simon,136 Or. 74 (298 P. 644).
In Hubbard v. Olsen-Roe Transfer Co., 101 Or. 168
(199 P. 187), the lower court entered an order sustaining a demurrer to an affirmative answer and striking out material parts of another answer. From that order an appeal was attempted, and this court, in rendering its opinion, said:
"The judgment to be appealable must be substantially a final disposition of the action. It cannot be, under our statute, that the instant a litigant becomes aggrieved at a decision of the trial court he can appeal to this court. It would lead to endless litigation, and rights of the parties would be decided by piecemeal, not only in the trial court but in the appellate court."
The case of Vaktaren Publishing Co. v. Pacific TribunePublishing Co., 41 Wash. 355 (83 P. 426), is *Page 345 
squarely in point. By reason of its clarity and helpfulness to a proper understanding of the question at issue, we here set out the following excerpt therefrom:
"In response to the summons served upon it, the respondent made a general appearance in the action, and moved the court to strike the complaint from the files of the court for the reason that it contained two or more causes of action which were not separately stated. This motion was granted by the court, and the appellant, conceiving itself aggrieved thereby, has appealed therefrom. The respondent moves to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the order appealed from is not an appealable order. This motion must be granted. An order entered before final judgment to be appealable under the statute must in effect determine the action and prevent a final judgment, or it must discontinue the action. This order in effect did neither. It simply determined that the complaint was insufficient in form, not that the appellant had no cause of action. The statute expressly provides that the court may allow an amended pleading to be filed where the original is stricken because it contains more than one cause of action or defense and the same are not pleaded separately. The appellant therefore had the right, when the motion to strike was sustained, to elect whether it would stand on its complaint and allow judgment to be taken against it, or whether it would amend and make its complaint conform to the court's idea of good pleading. As it did neither, the case was still pending in that court, neither discontinued nor determined, when it attempted to appeal to this court. It should have allowed judgment of dismissal to be taken against it and appealed from that judgment. The condition of the case is analogous to that where a demurrer has been sustained to a complaint, and we have repeatedly held that an appeal will not lie from such an order."
There is no common-law right of appeal. This right is conferred by statute: Smith Securities Co. v. Multnomah County,98 Or. 418 (192 P. 654, 194 P. 428). *Page 346 
The statute which governs in the instant case, as construed and applied by this court in many cases, does not empower the court to determine the merits of the appeal in this proceeding.
The appeal will be dismissed.
ROSSMAN and CAMPBELL, JJ., not sitting.