Court Opinion

ID: 6592653
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:59:09.895166+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:42.250942
License: Public Domain

Green, Judge,
announced the opinion of the Court:
This Court may issue attachments for contempt and fines summarily in cases of disobedience, by any person, to any of its lawful processes or orders. See Code of W. Va. ch. 147, § 27, p. 69, and State of W. Va. ex rel. Mason v. The Harper’s Ferry Bridge Company, 16 W. Va. pages 875, 876. The supersedeas alleged to have been disobeyed by John Osborne, special commissioner, was confessedly a lawful process, but he claims in his answer that he did not disobey this process, because the supersedeas served on him commanded him not to execute a decree of the circuit court of Pocahontas county in the cause of J. C. Hutton and others, plaintiffs, against James T. Lockridge and others, defendants, rendered on October 16, 1882 ; and that in renting out the lands of Lockridge he did so under a decree in said cause of October 17, 1882, which decree had not been superseded. And it is argued by his counsel, that this supersedeas of this Court was wholly inoperative, null and void as there was no decree in said cause rendered on October 16, 1882, and the suparsedeas on its face only superseded a decree rendered on the last named day.
*259The process on its face expressly superseded some decree rendered in this cause. It cannot therefore be a nullity as contended, unless the insertion in it of the wrong date when this decree was rendered mates the supersedeas so vague, that its meaning and purpose could not with any certainty be ascertained. If several distinct and substantially different decrees had been rendered in this cause, to any one of which the supersedeas of this Court would equally well have applied, and it could not be ascertained which of these several decrees the supersedeas was intended to operate upon, it is possible that the process issued by the cleric of this Court might be regarded as inoperative ; though even then the-far better and more prudent course for the person to pursue, who proposed to carry into execution any one of these decrees would have been, before so doing, to have applied to this Court to ascertain definitely what decree it intended to supersede; and even in that case, if without talcing such precaution he proceeded to execute any of these decrees, he might incur the risk of being punished for a contempt of this Court.
In the case before us there can be no possible question as to the decree, which the process issued by the cleric of this Court on December 19, 1882, and served on John Osborne, the special receiver, intended to supersede. There was but a single decree in this cause, which was then in force; all others having been superseded by a former order of this Court and being then before this Court for review. Of course the supersedeas must have referred to some decree rendered in this cause since September 8, 1879, when this Court superseded all decrees in the cause prior to that date. The decree of October 17, 1882, directing the lands of the defendant Lockridge to be rented out by the special receiver, John Osborne, was the only decree which had ever been rendered in the cause after the decree of April 29, 1879, which had been superseded. It was therefore unquestionably the decree intended to be superseded by the process issued on December 19, 1882. Nor could the mistake in the process in reciting this decree as rendered on October 16, 1882, instead of October 17, 1882, render in any degree ambiguous the decree intended to be superseded. The special receiver, *260John Osborne, must therefore have known, that it was the purpose of this Court by this process to supersede the execution of this decree of October 17, 1882. If he did know this, as must have been the case, it only remains to enquire whether or not he disobeyed this lawful process of this Court.
On January 2, 1883, as such special receiver-under this decree of the circuit court rendered October 17, 1882, he rented out the real estate of the defendant, Lockridge, at public auction. But this renting he did not report to the court, and unless so reported it would be inoperative. He did then an act, which was the initiatory stop in disobeying the lawful process of this Court and he is punishable therefore unless it clearly appears, that he injured no one and never intended to consummate this act of disobedience. This court may properly punish one, who has done anything in disobedience of its lawful process though he has not consummated his act of disobedience unless he can show, that he never thereby injured any one and never intended to consummate the act- and make it operative. The excuses which he makes in his answer, that he was apprehensive that the circuit court might punish him if he did not execute the decree of October 17, 1882, and that he regarded the process of this court as a nullity as it superseded a deeree said to have been rendered on October 16, 1882, when no deeree was rendered on that day, are not valid excuses. He had no reason to apprehend, that the circuit court would punish him for not executing the deeree of October 17, 1882, as that court must have known that this decree had been superseded by this Court. He must, therefore, be punished by this Court for his disobedience of the lawful process of this Court, unless. we are satisfied, that he never injured any one thereby and never intended to consummate his act of disobedience, the first step of which he took by renting publicly the real estate of the defendant, Lockridge, on January 2, 1883.
Did he injure any one thereby or did he ever intend to consummate this act? He injured no one; as possession of the property was not to be given to the renter till some two months after the renting, and, when he rented this property, he publicly proclaimed, that he had been served with the process of supersedeas of this Court; and he stated, that if the *261Court held this process effective he would surrender the-renter’s bond, return his cash payment and not report the renting to the circuit court. It seems to us but just to him to construe this conduct, as though he had announced-his purpose of applying to this Court and ascertaining, whether it considered the process issued by our clerk as effective or as a mere nullity. And so construing his conduct, if he had followed this declaration up by applying to this Court a week afterwards, when it met on January 10, 1883, to ascertain whether this process was or was not held to be effective, we could not have held otherwise than that he never did at any time intend to consummate his act of disobedience, and we could not have punished him for a contempt of this Count. But he never did make any such application to this Court. On the contrary the defendant, Loclmdge, aftevwaiting more than a week after this Court commenced its session, by his counsel, applied to this Court for a rule against said Osborne, to show cause why he should not bo fined and imprisoned for a contempt of this Court in disobeying its lawful process. It is to be presumed, that he took this course, because he did not believe that the special receiver, John Osborne, intended to make any application to this court to ascertain whether it regarded the process issued by our clerk and served on him as effective. He was justified in so doing on account of the unreasonable delay of the special receiver in making such application. As however it was known, that the session of this Court would last for at least two weeks after this rule was issued it seems to us, that it would be harsh in us to draw the conclusion, that the special receiver, John Osborne, did not intend during this term of this Court, to make this application to this Court to ascertain whether the process issued by our clerk was regarded by us as effective. As this may have been his intention we must hold, that he did not intend to consummate his act of disobedience to this Court and that therefore, he ought not to be punished by this Court for a contempt in disobeying the process oi this Court. This process is, as we have seen, lawful and effective. The bond too, which has been executed by the appellant and which was required to be given before the supersedeas took effect is a valid bond, and furnishes to the *262parties all the protection to which, they are legally entitled. It does not describe the decree superseded as one rendered on October 16, 1882, as did the process, but correctly describes it as a decree rendered in said cause at the October term, 1882, of said court.
Though we decline to punish the special receiver, John Osborne for a contempt of this Court yet, as we have seen, his conduct has been such as to justify the defendant, Lock-ridge, in asking oí this Court a rule against him; and therefore the defendant, Lockridge, must recover of him his costs expended in the prosecution in this Court of this proceeding; but the rule must be discharged.
Judges Johnson and Woods Concurred.
Rule Discharged.