Alderman v. Tillamook County

91 P. 298, 50 Or. 48, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 175
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 P. 298 (Alderman v. Tillamook County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alderman v. Tillamook County, 91 P. 298, 50 Or. 48, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 175 (Or. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion by

This suit was brought by the plaintiff against Tillamook County, W. W. Conder, county judge thereof, and Handley & Thayer, its attorneys, to enjoin and restrain the prosecution of á proceeding instituted by the county in the county court of such county for the removal of the plaintiff as administratrix of her husband’s estate. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained in the court below, and the sufficiency of the complaint is the only question for determination on this appeal.

[50]*50The facts alleged in the complaint are that H. H. Aider-man, the husband of plaintiff, was sheriff and ex officio tax collector of defendant county from September 7, 1897, until his death, January 24, 1904. Soon after his death plaintiff was duly and regularly appointed administratrix of his estate, and on July 28, 1904, the defendant county presented to her, as such administratrix, a claim against the estate of her intes•tate for $8,127,17 for money alleged to have beén received by him as tax collector and not paid over ,to the county, or otherwise accounted for. This claim was examined and .disallowéd by the plaintiff on August 1,-1904. On September 7th of that year the county, acting through the defendant Conder, as county judge, entered into a written contract with Handley & Thayer, by the terms of which they agreed, for a certain per cent of the amount recovered, to immediately commence and prosecute to final decision any and all necessary and practicable legal process to enforce the claim of the county against the intestate’s estate for moneys collected, by him and not accounted for, no .suit or action, however, to be commenced without the approval of the' county judge. ' About the time of the making of this contract the claim of the county, which had been presented to and disallowed by the plaintiff as administratrix, was, in pursuance of Section 1161, B. & C. Comp., presented to the county court, presided over by the defendant Conder, for allowance, and the same was, on October 6th, duly allowed by him. The plaintiff appealed from .this order, and pending the determination thereof the defendant county, through its attorneys, and by the sanction of Conder, commenced a suit in equity against plaintiff to subject certain real property, the title to which was in her name, to the payment of its claim, on the ground that such property had been conveyed to her by her husband for the purpose of defrauding creditors. The complaint was verified by Conder, and alleged that the county was a creditor of the estate by virtue of the order of the county court allowing its claim. Before this suit came on for hearing the appeal of the plaintiff from the order of the county, court allowing the claim was [51]*51heard and decided in her favor, and no appeal has been taken from such decision, and it. has become final. The plaintiff thereupon pleaded such judgment in abatement of .the suit referred to. This plea was sustained and the suit' dismissed, on the ground that the county had not reduced its claim against the estate to judgment, and therefore could not maintain a creditor’s bill to subject property held by her to .its payment.

On October 25, 1905,. while this suit was pending and undetermined, the defendant county, through its attorneys and by the direction of Conder, as county judge, commenced four separate suits in equity against plaintiff and certain persons alleged to have been bondsmen of her husband, to restore lost bonds and for an accounting, and also an action at law against plaintiff as administratrix of her husband’s estate, to establish its claim against such estate. The complaint, in all these suits and in the action, was verified by Conder as county judge, and the litigation was prosecuted with his approval and sanction. The plaintiff appeared in each of these suits and in the action, and was making apparently successful defenses thereto, when defendant county, acting through its attorneys, filed a petition in the county court, of which the defendant Conder was judge, alleging that it was a creditor of the estate of plaintiff’s decedent, and that she had been unfaithful in her trust as administratrix, because she had failed and neglected to include in the inventory thereof certain real property, the-title to which was in her name, but which, it was alleged, had been conveyed to her by her husband in fraud of creditors, and praying that-she be cited to appear and show cause why she should not be. removed as administratrix. The- plaintiff thereupon commenced this suit to enjoin further prosecution of such proceeding, alleging that it was instituted in pursuance of a conspiracy entered.into by Conder, as county judge, and the attorneys of. the county, to deprive the estate of her husband of any defense ; in the several suits and action pending against such estate by. removing her as administratrix and appointing some one friendly to the county’s interest.. It is alleged that it was [52]*52agreed, as a part of the conspiracy, that the attorneys should, in the name of the county, file false charges of misconduct against plaintiff, as administratrix, in the county court, over which defendant Conder presided, and that Conder, acting as judge of such court, should make an order removing her, without regard to any defense she might make, and that he would appoint another as administratrix of such estate, who would confess judgment in favor of the county in the several suits and action then pending, and thereby deprive the estate of any defense thereto; that Conder had been active in prosecuting the county's claim against the estate, and had agreed to decide all questions brought before him in favor of the county, and to remove the plaintiff as administratrix whenever he got an opportunity to do so; that, if she is removed by the county court, her right to act as administratrix will be suspended, pending an appeal from such order, and before the same could be heard or determined the estate and the bondsmen of her husband will forever be deprived of the right to make any defense to such suits and action; that the claim of the county is wrongful and illegal, and without merit, and, if permitted, the plaintiff can make a successful defense thereto:

1. That a court of equity has jurisdiction to enjoin pending or threatened proceedings in another court to prevent oppressive and vexatious litigation, and especially when such litigation is not brought in good faith, but is instituted for an illegal and wrongful purpose, is undisputed: 22 Cyc. 790, 793; 2 Story, Equity, § 901; Norfolk & N. B. H. Co. v. Arnold, 143 N Y. 265 (38 N. E. 271). The courts are not agreed as to what constitutes such litigation, and, as said by Mr. Justice Gray, “every ease must necessarily be governed in its disposition by its facts and circumstances, and the discretion of the court must be influenced in its exercise by’a consideration of the relative injury and - convenience which may result from granting or refusing equitable relief by way of injunction'': Bomeisler v. Forster, 154 N. Y. 229, 238 (48 N. E. 534, 535: 39 L. R. A. 240): It is unnecessary at this time for us to at[53]*53tempt to lay down any general rule on the subject or review the authorities. From the allegations of the complaint, which for the purposes of this appeal are admitted by the demurrer, and must be taken as true, a case appealing more strongly to a court of equity for relief could rarely be found.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 P. 298, 50 Or. 48, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alderman-v-tillamook-county-or-1907.