Doggett v. Johnson

257 P. 267, 79 Mont. 499, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 111
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1927
DocketNo. 6,104.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 257 P. 267 (Doggett v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doggett v. Johnson, 257 P. 267, 79 Mont. 499, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 111 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

HONORABLE THEODORE LENTZ, District Judge,

sitting in place of MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS, disqualified, delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by plaintiffs from an order of the lower court directing one Al. Wright to turn over to the defendants $1,676.30, received as rents from certain lands taken from the possession of the defendants and held by him while purporting to act as receiver.

On March 11, 1924, plaintiffs brought an action in unlawful detainer, seeking to recover the possession of certain lands then occupied by the defendants in Broadwater county. Defendants appeared by demurrer and challenged the sufficiency of the complaint. Thereupon the court, on April 14, 1924, appointed a receiver, with instructions to take the lands in question from defendants’ possession and cultivate them himself, or rent them on a crop basis, pending the disposal of the action. The receiver rented the lands to one Nilson, receiving in return one-fourth of the crop raised thereon for the year 1924, which he sold for $1,826.30.

In the meantime the defendants appealed from the order appointing the receiver. After due consideration it was decided by this court on March 25, 1925, that the order was void for lack of jurisdiction. (Doggett v. Johnson, 72 Mont. 443, 234 Pac. 252.) The defendants then applied to the lower court for an order requiring the receiver to report and to turn over *501 to them all funds derived from the rental of the lands which he had taken from their possession. In response to the court’s order, the receiver reported that he had in his hands the $1,826.30 derived from the sale of the grain and hay received as rental of the lands while in his possession, and asked for direction of the court as to its disposal. After a hearing in which both plaintiffs and defendants appeared and filed briefs and evidence was produced, the court allowed the receiver $150 out of the fund as his compensation and ordered him to turn over to the defendants the balance of $1,676.30.

In their appeal plaintiffs have presented the single question, Did the court have the power or the jurisdiction to order the receiver to pay the rentals collected by him to the defendants?' Plaintiffs earnestly contend that, this court having held that the lower court was powerless to appoint a receiver in the first place, through lack of jurisdiction, it follows as a matter of course that it is likewise powerless to make any subsequent orders in any way affecting the person named as receiver or the funds held by him; that the order being void ab initio and subject to collateral attack, all subsequent proceedings in any way connected therewith, including the order appealed from, are likewise void and of no effect.

The law is well settled that, where the court is without jurisdiction to appoint a receiver, the order may be attacked or disregarded whenever it comes collaterally in question. (24 Cyc. 168.) In State ex rel. Johnston v. District Court, 21 Mont. 155, 69 Am. St. Rep. 645, 53 Pac. 272, it was held that the district court was powerless to punish for contempt a person not a party to the action who refused to turn over certain funds to one who had collected and deposited the same while acting as receiver under an order of appointment void for lack of jurisdiction to make it.

Nevertheless it has been generally held that, where a court has erroneously exercised jurisdiction which it did not possess, it has power to correct any wrong which may have resulted from such improper action by undoing what was done, *502 so long as the subject of tbe controversy is in its custody and the parties are before it. (Northwestern Fuel Co. v. Brock, 139 U. S. 216, 35 L. Ed. 151, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 523 [see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]; Texas Land & Irr. Co. v. Sanders, 101 Tex. 616, 111 S. W. 648; People v. Jones, 33 Mich. 303; Close v. Hannig (Tex. Sup.), 17 S. W. 350; Brown v. Vancleave, 14 Ky. Law Rep. 821, 21 S. W. 756; 15 C. J. 854, and notes.)

In Northwestern Fuel Co. v. Brock, supra, plaintiff recovered a judgment in the circuit court, which was later reversed by the supreme court for lack of jurisdiction to entertain the action. In the meantime plaintiff collected a considerable sum from the defendant on execution. When the cause was remanded, the circuit court entered a judgment against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant for the amount that had been collected on the void judgment. On the second appeal it was contended that since the circuit court had no jurisdiction to entertain the action in its inception, its judgment of restitution was likewise void. The court said: “Buthere the juris-; diction exercised by the court below was only to correct by its own order, that which, according to the judgment of its' ap-' pellate court, it had no authority to do in the first instance; and the power is inherent in every court, whilst the subject of controversy is in its custody, and the parties are before it, to undo what it had no authority to do originally, and in which it; therefore, acted erroneously, and to restore, as far as possible, the parties to their former position. Jurisdiction to correct what had been wrongfully done must remain with the court so long as the parties and the case are properly before it, either in the first instance or when remanded to it by an appellate tribunal. * * * We are of opinion that the proceeding to enforce the restitution in the cases mentioned is under the control of the court, and that all needed inquiry can be had to guide its judgment in a summary proceeding, upon motion of the parties, the only requisite being that the opposite party shall be heard, so that in directing restitution no further wrong be committed. The restitution is not made to *503 depend at all upon the question whether or not the court rendering the judgment reversed acted within or without its jurisdiction.”

In Texas Land & Irr. Co. v. Sanders, supra, where a county-court erroneously and without jurisdiction by a mandatory injunction required defendants to deliver to plaintiff one-fifth of a crop of rice, which plaintiff sold for more than $1,200, it was held that the court had jurisdiction on further hearing to require plaintiff to pay to defendants the money received from the sale of the rice.

In People v. Jones, supra, the court said: “The respondent’s appointment as receiver having been determined by this court to be utterly void for want of jurisdiction, it was lawful and proper for the court below, which, by making the appointment, had deprived the defendants in said cause of the lawful custody of their property, by an order that was unauthorized and void, * * * to restore such property to the parties from whom it had been taken, and to place them as nearly in statu quo as the nature of things would permit and it was competent for the court to enforce such order by proceedings as for contempt.”

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Bluebook (online)
257 P. 267, 79 Mont. 499, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doggett-v-johnson-mont-1927.