Bowler v. First Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada

234 P.2d 593, 68 Nev. 445, 1951 Nev. LEXIS 101
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1951
Docket3663
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 234 P.2d 593 (Bowler v. First Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowler v. First Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, 234 P.2d 593, 68 Nev. 445, 1951 Nev. LEXIS 101 (Neb. 1951).

Opinion

*446 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, C. J.:

On March 28, 1951 Milton A. Bowler and Milton D. Bowler filed in this court their original petition for a writ of prohibition prohibiting the respondent district court and district judge from proceeding with certain receivership proceedings initiated against them by Stella Belanger Leonard Bryson. On April 3, 1951, in chambers, we made an order denying the petition without prejudice. The order contained a statement of the pertinent facts, and the status of the main controversy between Mrs. Bryson (formerly Stella B. Leonard Belanger) and the Bowlers existing at that time. A copy of the order is set forth in the margin. 1 On July 17, *447 1951 the matter was heard at length upon the original petition and on certain supplemental pleadings with sundry exhibits attached from which it appears that certain additional proceedings have since been had in *448 the respondent court. On June 25, 1951, two months and twenty-two days after we filed the order quoted in the margin, the respondent court filed an “Opinion and Ruling on Matters at Issue and Submitted,” in which it was, among other things, ordered that the demurrer to the amended complaint (to adjudge plaintiff’s ownership and right to possession of the livestock) be overruled and the motion to strike parts of the complaint be *449 denied, that the defendants have twenty days to answer the amended complaint and plaintiff have twenty days for a responsive pleading thereto. The court also denied the motion of the defendants to dismiss the petition for appointment of receiver filed February 6, 1951 (which appointment was ordered January 25, 1951), upon the *450 ground that the same was simply a rehearing, without leave of court, of matters theretofore determined, in violation of District Court Rule XI. 2 The court at the same time denied the motion of defendants to vacate the court’s order of March 13, 1951, appointing the receiver and ordering the defendants to deliver possession of the cattle to him. The grounds for that motion were the same as those alleged in support of the present petition for prohibition, namely, that the plaintiff had an adequate remedy at law in claim and delivery and that the court had no jurisdiction, without requiring bond, to appoint a receiver with a mandatory injunction that the defendants deliver up possession to him. All this appears from the recitals contained in respondent’s order of June 25, 1951. We list a few of the important dates bearing on the present situation:

Sept. 14, 1948, judgment, Stella B. Leonard Belanger v. David J. Belanger, adjudicating the former’s ownership of the forty-one head of milk cows and two bulls involved in all of the proceedings mentioned.

Oct. 21, 1949, judgment, Stella B. Leonard Belanger v. Childers and Vrenon, asserted successors in interest of David J. Belanger, again adjudicating her ownership of the same cattle.

Oct. 21, 1949, sheriff’s levy on said cattle, then possessed and claimed by the Bowlers, under writ of execution in Belanger v. Childers and Vrenon.

Feb. 10, 1950, our writ of mandamus (Bowler v. Vannoy, sheriff, 67 Nev. 80, 215 P.2d 248), ordering the sheriff to return the cattle to the Bowlers.

April 24, 1950, leave granted by district court in third party claim proceedings. in Leonard v. Childers and Vrenon permitting Mrs. Leonard to sue the Bowlers for possession of the livestock.

Dec. 12, 1950, complaint filed, Leonard v. Bowler.

*451 Dec. 18, 1950, Mrs. Leonard’s notice for motion for appointment of receiver.

Jan. 6, 1951, her amended notice of motion for appointment of receiver.

Jan. 25, 1951, “Notice by Court of Intent to Appoint a Receiver.”

March 13, 1951, order appointing receiver.

April 3, 1951, our order denying without prejudice alternative writ of prohibition.

April 21, 1951, amended complaint filed, Leonard v. Bowler.

April 30, 1951, demurrer to amended complaint and motion to strike filed.

May ?, 1951, demurrer and motion submitted without further argument.

June 25, 1951, order overruling demurrer, etc.

Defendants (petitioners herein) filed their answer to the amended complaint on July 17, 1951, the last of the twenty days allowed by the district court for the purpose, and being the same day that the petition for prohibition and supplemental matters were orally argued' to this court by both parties. At that time further briefs were ordered filed, the last of which was filed July 31, 1951, on which date the matter stood submitted to this court. If we may assume that plaintiff filed her reply to defendants’ answer within the period allowed by the trial court’s order, such reply must have been filed on or before August 6, 1951, so that the case is now at issue and ready to be tried on the merits. Such action is characterized by both parties and.by the district court as one in claim and delivery whose main issues are the ownership and right to immediate possession of the livestock asserted by both parties.

Petitioners insist, first, that Mrs. Bryson’s clear, plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the court below, as evidenced by her own pleadings, was an action at law in claim and delivery, in the course of which, if she desired immediate possession, she could obtain it under statutory *452 proceedings and upon filing the statutory bond; that with such remedy available, she had no recourse to the equitable remedy of the appointment of a receiver. Secondly, petitioners insist that respondents’ order appointing receiver contained express injunctive provisions 3 and that the court was without jurisdiction to issue such injunctive order without requiring a written undertaking to pay to the defendants such damages as they might sustain by reason thereof if the court should finally decide that the plaintiff was not entitled thereto. Sec. 8696 N.C.L. 1929; Shelton v. District Court, 64 Nev. 487, 185 P.2d 320; Havemeyer v. Superior Court, 84 Cal. 327, 24 P. 121.

Counsel for Mrs. Bryson (who appear herein as attorneys for respondents) contend: (1) that under the circumstances her remedy in claim and delivery was inadequate, and that her only protection against the threatened loss of the cattle was through the appointment of a receiver who might hold the same as an officer of the court pending the determination of the controversy; (2) that our statute governing the appointment of receivers does not require the posting of bond; 4

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Bluebook (online)
234 P.2d 593, 68 Nev. 445, 1951 Nev. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowler-v-first-judicial-district-court-of-the-state-of-nevada-nev-1951.