E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works v. Speed

59 Mich. 272
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 59 Mich. 272 (E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works v. Speed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works v. Speed, 59 Mich. 272 (Mich. 1886).

Opinions

Morse, J.

This is an application for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondent, one of the circuit judges of the Wayne circuit court, to vacate and set aside an order entered by him on the twelfth day of November, 1885. On the twenty-eighth day of July, 1884, Henry M. Du field commenced a suit, by attachment, in the Superior Court of Detroit, against the E. T. Barnutn Wire & Iron Works, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of this State, and under said proceedings in attachment secured a levy upon all or nearly all the lands, goods and chattels belonging to said corporation. On or about the twenty-first day of August, 1884, said Duffield filed his declaration in said attachment suit. On the thirteenth day of October, same year, the defendant (the relator) filed a plea of general issue in said cause. The suit was noticed for trial, October 18, 1884, by plaintiff. The said cause has been upon the docket for trial at nearly every term since it was at issue and it was noticed and placed upon the docket for the September term, 1885, of said Superior Oourt by the plaintiff. It was also legally noticed and placed upon the docket for trial at the November term, 1885, of said Superior Oourt by the defendant. That on the seventh day of November, 1885, the said plaintiff moved for a continuance of said cause, which motion, on the same day, was argued by the counsel for the respective parties, and has not as yet been decided by said Superior Court.

After the attachment suit had been commenced, the corporation became insolvent, and made an assignment for the benefit of creditors. The First National Bank of Detroit and the Merchants and Manufacturers’ Bank of Detroit filed a bill of complaint in the circuit court for the county .of Wayne, in chancery, against said insolvent corporation, also making the assignee, Abram L. Stebbins, Henry M. Duffield, and other parties who also held attachment liens prior to Duffield’s, parties defendant to said bill. In this chancery proceeding, by consent of all the parties, an order was entered [275]*275appointing said Abram L. Stebbins receiver of said corporation, and recognizing and protecting the liens acquired by said Duffield and others in the attachment suits then pending. Afterwards, and before the entering of the order complained of, the wire and iron works corporation, and the receiver, acting in privity, consented that certain of the attaching creditors might take judgments in their respective suits,' and judgments were taken in the said Superior Court, and in the Wayne circuit court respectively; but they did not, for some reason, consent that Duffield might take judgment, but as far as his claim was concerned, continued the contest. And the relator now claims that they have a good and valid defense to said attachment suit of Duffield’s and are anxious to try the issue therein joined. After the plaintiff Duffield had moved for a continuance of his cause in the Superior Court, and while the motion was in abeyance, he filed his petition in the Wayne circuit court, in chancery, entitled in the chancery cause under which the receiver was appointed, as aforesaid, setting forth, among other things, that he had filed his proof of claim against the insolvent corporation in •said cause on the fifteenth day of October, 1885, setting up identically the same cause of action that was at issue in his suit in the Superior Court; that no notice of any contest of his claim had been served upon him; that the wire and iron' works corporation had noticed his suit in the Superior Court for trial, and intended to compel him to try the same at that (November) term of said eourt; that he had appealed to the Supreme Court on the petition filed by him in the chancery cause to remove the receiver; that the pendency of such appeal might prejudice the receiver in acting upon his claim; and that he (Duffield) ought not to be compelled to litigate his claim at the same time in the Superior Court and in the Wayne circuit, in chancery; and praying for a restraining order, which was granted, as follows :

“In the Circuit Court for the County of Wayne — In Chancery.
“The First National Bank of Detroit et al. v. The E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works et al.
At a session of said court held at the court-room, in the [276]*276city of Detroit, on the twelfth day of November, 1885, present, J. J. Speed, circuit judge, on reading and filing the petition of Henry M. Duffield, praying, among other things, that the defendant the E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works be ordered to desist and refrain from trying, or forcing to trial, the attacbmen fc suit of the petitioner against said E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works, pending in the Superior Court of Detroit, and on hearing Henry M. Duffield, in propria persona, in behalf of said petition, and Erank H. Canfield, solicitor for the corporation, in opposition thereto, and the court having duly considered the same, it is hereby ordered that the said E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works, and the said petitioner be, and they are hereby, ordered to desist and refrain, until the further order of this Court, from trying or forcing to trial the attachment suit of said petitioner against said defendant the E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works, under writ of attachment, in which suit the sheriff was in possession of certain property of the E. T. Barnum Wire & Iron Works at the time of the appointment of the receiver in this cause.
[Signed] “John J. Speed, Circuit Judge.”

The main reason assigned to sustain the validity of this order by the respondent in his answer is this: That, when the judgments taken by consent in the Superior Court and the Wayne circuit were brought into the chancery cause to prove the claims of the respective parties holding the same, the respondent, as circuit judge, decided that such judgments could not be used for such purpose, but such claims must be proved anew, and might be there contested by the receiver or the creditors; and that, therefore, the trial of, or judgment in the Superior Court, in the suit between Duffield and the corporation would be of no benefit to either party, as a judgment would not be final or conclusive, and the whole matter would, notwithstanding such judgment, be open to litigation dc novo in the Wayne circuit in chancery under the claim filed therein. The same line of argument is followed in this Court by the counsel for respondent. It is insisted that, if Duffield obtained a judgment in the Superior Court, still, in the chancery cause, the whole controversy would be open, and would have to be gone over again; and, contra, if Duffield was defeated in the Superior Court, he [277]*277might still contest anew his claim filed in the chancery-cause without regard to the judgment against him. "We cannot agree in this proposition. If, after a trial on the merits in the Superior Court, it should be determined that Duffield had no claim against the corporation, such determination, if not reversed or set aside in a proper proceeding for that purpose, would be a conclusive bar to the further prosecution of his claim in the chancery cause. The rule of law is well settled, and cannot be disputed, that the court which first obtains jurisdiction of the cause shall have exclusive right to decide the matter in issue, and any other court, save an appellate one, which subsequently assumes to act in the matter, must, when this priority of jurisdiction is brought to its attention, proceed no further.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Mich. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-t-barnum-wire-iron-works-v-speed-mich-1886.