Court Opinion

ID: 7967762
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:52:12.797361+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:41.577947
License: Public Domain

Dickinson, J.
In proceedings at Stillwater, in Washington county, before the Hon. W. C. Williston, judge of the district court in and for the first judicial district, upon an order requiring the relators to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt of court, they were adjudged to be guilty of contempt, and fines were imposed therefor. By writ of certiorari the proceedings have been brought to this court for review. The proceedings to be reviewed, and the events connected with the acts of the relators, for which they were found guilty of contempt, may be thus stated:
An action was commenced in the district court in the county of St. Louis (eleventh judicial district) by one Myers and others, who may be hereafter referred to as the Myers brothers, against the Duluth Transfer Railway Company, the Calumet Construction Company, these relators, and others, to restrain these relators and others from proceeding with the construction of the railroad of said railway company across certain lands at or near the city of Duluth, of which the plaintiffs were the owners of an undivided one third. It appears that the Calumet Construction Company had contracted to construct the railroad, and that subcontracts for construction had been let, pursuant to which the relators had undertaken and were performing the work sought to be restrained. The defense was interposed that the right to construct the road across the plaintiffs’ land had been acquired by condemnation proceedings.
Upon the ex parte application of the plaintiffs in that action, based on the complaint therein, a preliminary injunction was directed to be and was issued and served upon the relators. This *290order was made by the Honorable Ira B. Mills, the judge of the fourteenth judicial district, residing at Moorhead, in Clay county, but who was also exercising the duties of a judge of the eleventh district; from which the fourteenth had been carved out. Laws 1887, ch. 100; Laws 1889, eh. 151. Upon the service of the injunction upon the relators they appealed to this court from tho order granting the same, and executed the supersedeas bond provided by statute to stay proceedings pending an appeal. They then went on with the work of constructing the railroad, in disobedience of the terms of the injunction. Thereupon, upon application of the plaintiffs to the Honorable F. M. Crosby, one of the judges of the first judicial district, an order was’ made directing the relators to show cause before Judge Williston, the other judge of that district, at Stillwater, therein, as before stated, why they should not be punished for such disobedience of the injunction. This proceeding seems to have been instituted and prosecuted before the judges of the first judicial district for the reason that it was claimed' on the part of the plaintiffs that “Judges Stearns and Ensign, of the eleventh district, residing at Duluth, where the acts complained of were committed, were disqualified from acting by reason of having an interest in the matter to which the injunction related. Upon the return of the order to show cause before Judge Williston the relators appeared specially, objecting to the jurisdiction of the judges of the first district to proceed in the matter, presenting affidavits to show that Judges Stearns and Ensign were not thus interested, and that the proceedings might have been taken before them at Duluth.
The first judicial district adjoins the eleventh.
It is claimed on the part of the relators that the effect of the appeal from the order of Judge Mills granting the injunction, with the filing of the supersedeas bond, had the effect to suspend the operation of the order during the pendency of the appeal; the ease of State v. Duluth St. Ry. Co., 47 Minn. 369, (50 N. W. Rep. 332,) being cited in support of this proposition. Granting that such would be the effect of an appeal from an appealable order, that would not be the result of an appeal not authorized by law; and we hold that the order from which the appeal was taken was not appealable, but that *291the relators should first have sought relief in the court below from the order granted ex parte, and without the benefit of such argument •or disclosure as the adverse party might have made against the allowance or continuance of the injunction. That appeals will lie from such ex parte orders is opposed to the obvious reason upon which all purely appellate proceedings must be supposed to rest, namely, the necessity of an appeal to correct the error supposed to have been committed. The law attaches much importance to the hearing of ■both the interested parties, not only as a matter of right to them, but •as an aid to courts in the determination of matters brought before them. It is ordinarily to be supposed that a court which may have acted inconsiderately or erroneously upon a one-sided application would perceive and correct its error if the adverse party were heard. An examination of many decisions in this court shows that the general language of the statute declaring the right of appeal has been construed in a limited sense where there has been no real consideration in the court below of the matter in question, with -opportunity for the interested parties to be heard, and when it is to be presumed that upon bearing and consideration the court would correct any error which it may have committed.
Thus, while an appeal will lie from a judgment of the district court, and while the costs taxed by the clerk and entered in the judgment become a part of it, yet, for error in the judgment in respect to such costs, relief must in the first instance be sought in that court. Jensen v. Crevier, 33 Minn. 372, (23 N. W. Rep. 541;) Coles v. Berryhill, 37 Minn. 56, (33 N. W. Rep. 213;) Stevens v. McMillin, 37 Minn; 509, (35 N. W. Rep. 372.) So relief must first be sought iu that court with respect to a judgment entered by the clerk errone-' ously or without authority of law. Oldenberg v. Devine, 40 Minn. 409, (42 N. W. Rep. 88;) Lundberg v. Single Men’s Endowment Ass’n, 41 Minn. 508, (43 N. W. Rep. 394;) Scott v. Minneapolis, St. P. & S. S. M. Ry. Co., 42 Minn. 179, (43 N. W. Rep. 966.) So, where judgment has been directed at the close of a trial without findings of fact, the court below should be appealed to to supply the defect. Williams v. Schembri, 44 Minn. 250, 253, 254, (46 N. W. Rep. 403.) So where findings of the court are obviously broader than was in*292tended, or are not sufficiently distinct, or do not cover the issues. Smith v. Pendergast, 26 Minn. 318; Schulte v. First Nat. Bank, 34 Minn. 48, (24 N. W. Rep. 320;) Warner v. Foote, 40 Minn. 176, (41 N. W. Rep. 935.) On appeal from a judgment the question whether the evidence justified the verdict will not be considered if there has been no application in the court below for its ruling upon that point. Kelly v. Rogers, 21 Minn. 146. Upon an order made pro forma and without consideration in the court below, the merits of the controversy will not be considered on appeal. Johnson v. Howard, 25 Minn. 558; and see Colvill v. Langdon, 22 Minn. 565, 569. Such illustrations might be still further extended.
In Hoffman v. Mann, 11 Minn. 364, (Gil. 262,) it was held, under the statute as it then stood, that an appeal would not lie from an ex parte order made by a judge at chambers; the order in that case being an order granting a preliminary injunction. This decision was followed in a similar case in Schurmeier v. First Div. St. P. & P. R. Co., 12 Minn. 351, (Gil. 228.) It is true that those decisions were based upon a construction of the statute as allowing an appeal only from an order of the court as distinguished from an order made by the judge at chambers. Since the revision of the statute in 1866 there has been no room for such a distinction, but we believe that the bar has continued to regard the law as not authorizing appeals from mere ex parte orders in such cases. Excepting the case of Gale v. Seifert, 39 Minn. 171, (39 N. W. Rep. 69,) — an appeal from an order dissolving aD attachment upon the giving of the statutory bond authorized as a substitute for an attachment, — we do not recall a case in which relief from an ex parte order of this kind has not been sought in the first instance in the court below, where that has been practicable. This practical construction of the statute for so many years, in accordance with the theory upon which so many decisions have been made, that appeals are allowed only when necessary for the correction of the error committed, affords a sufficient reason for the conclusion which we have expressed, that this order was not appealable. We need not consider whether the order in Gale v. Seifert was nonappealable, because made upon an ex parte application. That point was not presented to nor considered by the court in that case.
*293We come, then, to the question whether the judges of the first judicial district had jurisdiction to entertain this proceeding for contempt, and to adjudicate therein. The Constitution, art. 6, § 5, authorizes the legislature to provide by law that the judge of one district may discharge the duties of a judge of any other district, not his own, when convenience or the public interest may require it, and the legislature has so ordained, 1878 G. S. ch. 64, § 5. Section 3 provides that the courts in term time, and the judges thereof in vacation, have power to award throughout the state, returnable to the proper county, writs of injunction ne exeat, and all other writs or process necessary to the perfect exercise of the powers with which they are vested, and the due administration of justice. Section 5 has further declared that whenever a district judge is a party or otherwise interested in any cause, another district judge, in an adjoining district, shall, within his district, transact any ex parte business, hear and determine motions and grant orders in such causes, when brought before him, which acts shall have the same force as if done in the district in which such actions are pending. 1878 G. S. ch. 66, § 87, as amended by Laws 1881, ch. 7, provides that motions must be made in the district in which the action is pending, or in an adjoining district, provided that no motion shall be made in an adjoining district which shall require the hearing of such a motion at a greater distance from the county seat where the action is pending than the residence of the judge of the district wherein such action is pending from such county seat, with a qualification not necessary to be here noticed.
The acts adjudged to have constituted a contempt were committed in the county of St. Louis, in the eleventh district, and the venue of the action, in the course of which the injunction was issued, was in that county. Assuming that the statutes above referred to are applicable to this proceeding, it was not necessary that the same be prosecuted before Judge Mills, residing in the fourteenth district, further from the county seat of St. Louis county than is Stillwater, where this contempt matter was heard and decided. We are of the opinion that the statutes cited, considered in connection with the nature and constitution of our district court or “courts,” as the court *294of general jurisdiction in the state, divided into districts, for^convenience, justify the institution and prosecution of such a proceeding in a district adjoining that in which it should ordinarily be conducted, if good reason therefor be shown; and disqualification of the judge or judges of the latter district is a reason for proceeding in an adjoining' district.
Whether Judges Stearns and Ensign were so interested in the subject to which the injunction related as to have disqualified them from acting was a matter of controversy upon affidavits submitted to the decision of th'e district judge; and the rule always followed in this court in reviewing decisions upon matters of fact is applicable here. There was proof reasonably and so far supporting the claim that those judges were interested that we should not overrule the determination of the district judge as to the fact.
It is said on the part of the relators that the injunction was void, because the railroad company had acquired by condemnation against the coteuants of the Myers brothers (the plaintiffs in the action) the right to construct its road across these premises. The proof upon which the injunction was granted was to the effect that the premises were adapted for residence purposes; that the threatened construction of the road across the same would involve an excavation of the soil to the depth of from two to twenty-five feet, to a width of about fifty feet, and for a distance of over 2,000 feet. It is believed that the cotenants of the Myers brothers would not have been justified, by virtue of their cotenancy, in doing such acts destructive t"o the estate, and so foreign to the ordinary use and enjoyment of such premises, and that they would have been restrained by injunction from what would be deemed waste. Russell v. Merchants' Bank, 47 Minn. 286, (50 N. W. Rep. 228;) 1 High, Inj. 692; Hawley v. Clowes, 2 Johns. Ch. 122. But, however this may be, there can be no doubt that such condemnation proceedings, as against one or more of several tenants in common, are ineffectual as against the other cotenants. The constitutional right of the latter to the use and enjoyment of their property cannot be thus divested or impaired. Their property cannot be thus taken without proper proceedings for that purpose, including compensation to them. This point might have been more briefly *295disposed of by saying that the injunction was not void, and, so long as it stood, must be obeyed.
For the relators it is further contended that the law relating to contempt and punishment therefor, 1878 G. S. ch. 87, is unconstitutional, since by the Criminal Code such a contempt is declared to be a misdemeanor, and because § 15 of that chapter authorizes not only summary proceedings and punishment for contempt, as prescribed in that chapter, but also subjects the offender to indictment and further punishment. If it be conceded that to thus subject one to double punishmeut would violate the constitution, it will not avail the relators. That would be no reason why they should not be once punished. If section 15, declaring that the persons proceeded against should also be liable to indictment, were deemed unconstitutional, it would not follow that the rest of the law should fall. Indeed, it may be said that, if the whole of chapter 87 were swept away, there would remain unimpaired the inherent power of the court to punish for contempt. Whether, after one has been so punished, that would constitute a bar to a further prosecution, we need not consider.
The writ is discharged.