Bankers Trust Co. v. Scott

246 N.W. 836, 215 Iowa 1107
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 14, 1933
DocketNo. 41844.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 246 N.W. 836 (Bankers Trust Co. v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers Trust Co. v. Scott, 246 N.W. 836, 215 Iowa 1107 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Kintzinger, }.

— The Bankers’ Trust Company, plaintiff in this case, commenced two proceedings in civil action in Polk county, Iowa, against Gustav Eckhardt et al., on certain obligations of the defendants in those actions. The defendants duly appeared in said actions and filed pleadings therein. Thereafter the defendants also commenced equitable actions in Scott county, Iowa, against the plaintiffs in the actions started in Polk county, asking that the obligations sued on in Polk county be canceled, and declared null and void, and of no effect,

In the equitable actions commenced by the Eckhardts in Scott county, they filed an application or petition for an injunction to restrain the Bankers’ Trust Company, its officers and agents, from proceeding with either of the actions brought by them in the district court of Polk county, during the pendency of the actions filed by the Eckhardts in Scott county. Thereupon, Bankers’ Trust Company, the plaintiff in this action, filed a motion in the actions commenced in Scott county by the Eckhardts to dismiss the application fox the injunction referred to.

The motion to dismiss was based on the grounds that the district court of Scott county was acting without jurisdiction, because an action fox an injunction to restrain proceedings in a civil action pending in Polk county could only be commenced and. prosecuted in Polk county where the actions were pending. The district court of Scott county, the Honorable Wm. W. Scott presiding, overruled and denied the motion to dismiss filed by the defendant Bankers’ Trust Company in the Eckhardt cases pending in Scott county. Thereafter, the Bankers’ Trust Company, plaintiffs in this case, applied for a writ of certiorari, which was duly issued out of this court.

A determination of this case depends upon the construction of section 12527, of the Code of Iowa pertaining to actions to enjoin proceedings in a civil action brought in another county.

Section 12527 of the Code provides as follows:

“12527. Restraint on proceedings or judgment — venue. When proceedings in a civil action, or on a judgment or final order, are sought to be enjoined, the action must be brought in the county and *1109 court in which such action is pending or the judgment or order was obtained, unless such judgment or final order is obtained in the supreme court, in which case the action must be brought in the county and court from which the case was taken to the supreme court.”

A determination of this case depends upon the construction of the words:

“When proceedings in a civil action, or on a judgment or final order, are sought to be enjoined, the action must be brought in the county and court in which such action is pending or the judgment or order was obtained. * * *” .

It will be observed that this statute relates to (1) proceedings in a civil action, or (2) proceedings on a judgment or final order. If the term “proceedings in a civil action” is not construed to mean more than “proceedings on a process or judgment” then the district court of Scott county was right, and we would need to go no further. But if the words are held to mean more than a “process,” “order,” or judgment of a court, then it may be that the lower court was without jurisdiction to enter the restraining order complained of.

In the following cases it has been held by our court that an action will not lie in one county to enjoin proceedings in another county and court on a judgment rendered therein, even though the plaintiff’s action is based on the claim that the judgment is wholly void. Ferris v. Grimes, 204 Iowa 587, 215 N. W. 646; Hawkeye Ins. Co. v. Huston, 115 Iowa 621, 89 N. W. 29; Lockwood v. Kitteringham, 42 Iowa 257; Anderson v. Hall et al., 48 Iowa 346; Bennett v. Hanchett, 49 Iowa 71; Grattan v. Matteson, 51 Iowa 622, 2 N. W. 432; Ulber v. Dunn, 143 Iowa 260, 119 N. W. 269; Brunk v. Moulton Bank, 121 Iowa 14, 95 N. W. 238.

In the foregoing cases the question before the court was whether or not, under section 12527, an action to restrain proceedings on a judgment could be brought in. another county and court from the one in which the judgment was rendered. All of these cases seem to have been founded upon an action enjoining proceedings on a judgment. The restraining order in this case, however, is limited to a restraint from proceeding with the actions commenced in Polk county. There was no judgment in either of those cases.

The question in this case is based upon the construction of the words “proceedings in a civil action, or on a judgment or final *1110 order.” It is the contention of the respondent in this case that the term “proceedings in a civil action”, as used in section 12527, refers only to proceedings on a judgment, and they attempt to substitute for the word proceedings, the word process.

Thus far it seems as though a discussion of this question by our court has been confined to cases in which it was sought to restrain “proceedings on a judgment”.

The decisions upon the construction of prior statutes relating to this question seem to have been confined to the question of whether or not the old statute was broad enough to include a proceeding-on a judgment, and all the above cases so hold.

In the case of Hawkeye Ins. Co. v. Huston, 115 Iowa 621, 89 N. W. 29, 30, the court says:

“The appellants challenge the jurisdiction of the district court of Polk county to entertain an action to enjoin and cancel a judgment rendered in the district court of Jones county. As this objection, if well founded, renders the discussion of other propositions entirely futile, it demands our careful consideration. By the Revision of 1860, is was provided: ‘Sec. 3778. When proceedings in a civil action are sought to be enjoined, the suit must be brought in the county where such proceedings are pending.’ When carried into the Code of 1873, this section was amended to read as follows: ‘Sec. 3396. When proceedings in a civil action, or on a judgment or final order, are sought to be enjoined, the suit must be brought in the same county and court in which such action is pending or the judgment or order was obtained.’ In the Code of 1897 this provision was readopted without change of language. See section 4364. The meaning of this statute does not seem to be obscure, but the adjudicated cases more or less directly involving its interpretation and application are by no means harmonious. It will be observed that prior to the Code of 1873 the law required one who sought to enjoin proceedings in a civil action to seek his remedy in the county where such action was ‘pending.’ This left it in doubt whether, after judgment or final order had been entered, the action was still to be considered as ‘pending,’ within the meaning of the statute. That doubt was removed by the Code of 1873, as we have above noted, and thereafter an injunction to restrain proceedings upon a judgment. was required to be brought not only in the same county, bui in the came court ‘in which the judgment was obtained.’ ”

*1111 From the language used in the foregoing opinion, it is apparently conceded that the statute included proceedings

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246 N.W. 836, 215 Iowa 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-trust-co-v-scott-iowa-1933.