Boxwell v. Greeley Union National Bank

5 P.2d 868, 89 Colo. 574, 80 A.L.R. 1179, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 334
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 2, 1931
DocketNo. 12,483.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 5 P.2d 868 (Boxwell v. Greeley Union National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boxwell v. Greeley Union National Bank, 5 P.2d 868, 89 Colo. 574, 80 A.L.R. 1179, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 334 (Colo. 1931).

Opinions

PLAINTIFF Boxwell brought this action against Ernest A. Morgan, the Greeley Land and Live Stock Company, the Greeley Union National Bank and other defendants who, if served with summons, did not appear in the action. The original complaint was amended and this amended complaint was further amended. As thus amended this pleading, in substance, states that in the year 1924, plaintiff Boxwell resided in the state of Iowa, and was there engaged in breeding Hereford cattle and other live stock, was familiar with values and productivity of Iowa lands but not with similar Colorado properties or with irrigation farming, all of which was well known by the defendant Morgan and the defendant land company, which was organized by and under his full control. In that year plaintiff was in Greeley, Colorado, and there met Morgan and, as the result of fraudulent representations, was induced to enter into a written contract with him and to sign a note and to engage with Morgan and his company in carrying on the live stock business on the ranch property in Weld county thus acquired, all of which was to the great loss and damage of the plaintiff.

The relief asked by the plaintiff is rescission and cancellation of the contract and note, and damages to him resulting from defendant's fraud. In the district court the defendants who appeared in the action, with the exception of the Greeley bank, filed their respective motions and special and general demurrers to the amended complaint, all of which were overruled, the trial court holding that as to these defendants the amended complaint stated a good cause of action. The defendant Greeley bank filed its own separate motions and special demurrers attacking the complaint, all of which were *Page 576 overruled. Thereupon the bank filed its general demurrer to the amended complaint as further amended, which the court sustained. The plaintiff declining further to amend or change his amended complaint, the court, after sustaining the general demurrer thereto, dismissed the action as to the bank on the latter's motion therefor. The present writ of error is by the plaintiff Boxwell against the Greeley bank as sole defendant in error, having for its object a review only of the order or judgment of the district court dismissing the action as to the bank.

After the district court had sustained this general demurrer of the bank to the plaintiff's complaint as amended, and dismissed the action as to the bank, it was orally stipulated by the parties concerned that if plaintiff should, as he did, elect to stand upon his amended complaint and should thereupon prosecute a writ of error from the judgment dismissing the action as to the defendant bank, which he has done by the present writ of error, the trial of issues to be thereafter joined in the said cause as against the other defendants, should be continued from time to time until the Supreme Court should determine such writ of error; and that such dismissal, in so far as it affects the defendant bank, is without prejudice to plaintiff's right to proceed in the case as against the remaining defendants, other than the bank, as he may be advised.

This court hitherto has not been confronted with a situation exactly like that which is exhibited by this record. There is no charge in the complaint that the defendant bank had any connection with, or any knowledge of, the alleged frauds practiced by Morgan and his company upon the plaintiff Boxwell. The bank is proceeded against on the alleged ground that several years after the perpetration of the alleged fraud of the defendant Morgan upon the plaintiff, the bank received from this defendant, as payment of his note to the bank as payee, moneys which in equity belonged to the plaintiff, being part of the money of which plaintiff had been defrauded *Page 577 by the defendant Morgan, all of which frauds the bank knew at the time Morgan paid his note.

[1-3] It has been repeatedly held that a reviewing court has the inherent authority to regulate its jurisdiction so as to prevent successive appeals from a judgment. 3 C. J., p. 348, § 97. Although the defendant in error bank in this writ of error has discussed the merits, it has observed in its brief that the writ of error is premature. Doubtless it may be true that both parties upon this review desire to have this court determine the propriety of the order of the district court dismissing the action as against the bank. Under the almost unbroken line of decisions we cannot with propriety do so, because the order or judgment, which the plaintiff in error has brought up for review, is not a final judgment, but interlocutory, to which neither an appeal nor writ of error lies unless some statute expressly authorizes it, and we have no such permissive statute in this state. The question here involved has been repeatedly decided by our own court and our Court of Appeals. In Dusing v.Nelson, 7 Colo. 184, 2 P. 922, this court, speaking on this point, page 186, said: "If the order entered in a cause does not put an end to the action, but leaves something further to be done before the rights of the parties are determined, it is interlocutory and not final. To be final it must end the particular suit in which it is entered." This case has several times been cited with approval by this court and our Court of Appeals. Rice v. Van Why,49 Colo. 7, 111 P. 599; County Court v. Eagle Rock Co.,50 Colo. 365, 371, 115 P. 706; Goodknight, Admr. v.Harper, 70 Colo. 41, 44, 197 P. 237; Peters v. Peters,82 Colo. 503, 507, 261 P. 874.

Hagerman v. Moore, 2 Colo. App. 83, 29 P. 1014, was an action brought upon a contract against three persons. It was dismissed as to only one of the defendants against whom rights were claimed. Judge Bissell in that opinion stated that if the rule were otherwise than that announced in the Dusing case, supra, there would be two *Page 578 appeals taken in the same suit to review two different judgments rendered in the same action. So in the case now before us. The dismissal of the suit as to the defendant bank did not determine the merits of the controversy at all, and it did not end this suit, and such was the view of the parties themselves in the district court when they stipulated that until final decision of the Supreme Court on this writ of error was had, further proceedings in the district court would be suspended with the right of the plaintiff thereafter to proceed further in the case on the other part or fragment thereof as to the alleged frauds perpetrated on the plaintiff by the defendant Morgan.

It would seem that no further discussion or citation of authorities is necessary, but we desire to cite and briefly comment upon some other decisions which bear upon the question here involved. In the opinion in City of Batesvillev. Ball, Ann. Cas. 1913C, p. 1317, there is a note in which various decisions are commented upon in line with our own decision in Dusing v. Nelson, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
5 P.2d 868, 89 Colo. 574, 80 A.L.R. 1179, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boxwell-v-greeley-union-national-bank-colo-1931.