Ellis v. Karl

7 Neb. 381
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 7 Neb. 381 (Ellis v. Karl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. Karl, 7 Neb. 381 (Neb. 1878).

Opinion

Lake, J.

This is an appeal from the district court for Saline county. The action was brought in that court against the defendants, the county officers of that county, to enjoin them, from removing their respective offices from Pleasant Hill, the former county seat, to Wilbur, the plaee to which it had been declared removed by a vote of the county.

The conclusion at which we have arrived makes it really unnecessary to notice but the single question raised by the demurrer of whether the petition states a cause of action; but, inasmuch as an important question of practice respecting the power of the several judges of the district courts to grant injunctions, in cases brought in each other’s districts, is properly raised, we have thought it best not to overlook it.

Saline county, the one in which the action was brought, is in the first judicial district, and is presided over by the Hon. A. J. Weaver, judge. The record shows that when the petition was about to be filed it was presented to Judge Pound of the second district, who, without any showing of inability on the part of Judge Weaver to act, allowed a temporary injunction as prayed. The controling statute on this subject is Sec. 55, page 261, Gen. Statutes, which provides that: Whenever a vacancy shall occur in the office of dis[386]*386trict judge, in any district in this state, or whenever it shall appear by affidavit to the satisfaction of any district judge in the state that the judge of any other district is unable to act, on account of sickness, interest, or absence from the district, or from any other cause, the judge to whom application may be made, shall have power to make any order,” etc., “ which the judge of such district could make or do,” etc.

Under the constitution, the judges of the district courts, as such, have no inherent judicial authority at chambers whatever. Sec. 23, Art. YI, provides that: “The several judges of the courts of record shall have such jurisdiction at chambers as may be provided by law.” By Sec. 252 of the code of civil procedure, it is enacted that: “The injunction may be granted at the time of commencing the action, or at any time after-wards, before judgment, by the supreme court or any judge thereof, the district court or any ¡judge thereof,” etc. This is one of the provisions “ by lam,” contemplated by the section of the constitution just quoted.

It is contended by plaintiffs’ counsel that this section is quite comprehensive enough to authorize any district judge to grant temporary injunctions throughout the state, no matter whether the judge of the court in which the action is brought be absent from his district, or otherwise incapacitated to act or not. But, even independently of section 55, from which we have quoted above, we do not think that the language here employed warrants this construction. The words, “the district court, or any judge thereof,” clearly refer alone to the particular court in which the action is brought, and to the judge having for the time being jurisdiction within that district. Ordinarily this would be the judge of that judicial district, and, but for section 55, it could be no other. The jurisdiction, however, which this latter section confers, is conditional only, not general. It can be [387]*387properly exercised in a district where the office of judge is vacant, or when it is shown that the judge of a district is absent, or from any other cause unable to act if applied to. But if the judge of one district assume to act in a cause pending in another, where no such disability or absence exists, such act would be unauthorized and void; and so we find the act of Judge Pound, in granting the temporary injunction in this case, to have been. The two sections of the statutes from which we quote are not in conflict with each other, and must be considered together, and given effect in the determination of this branch of the case. Judge Weaver was clearly right in holding that this preliminary injunction had been granted without jurisdiction.

But, does the petition state a good course of action? This is the principal question in the case. The substantial points made by the pleader, and now relied on, are two: First. That in ordering the first election the commissioners acted without jurisdiction. Second. That said election, as well as the succeeding ones, was void for the reason that notices thereof were not given for the length of time which the statute requires.

The alleged want of jurisdiction is based upon the fact that although the petition for re-location as presented to the board of commissioners contained the names of persons purporting to be electors “ equal in numbers to three-fifths of all the votes cast in said county at the last general election,” yet the fact was, “ that a large number of the names attached to said petition were the names of fictitious persons, and forged names, and the names of non-residents,” etc., so that, counting only the genuine legal signatures, there were considerably less than the requisite number to authorize the calling of an election.

Section one of the act of February 24,1875, providing for the re-location of county seats, gives to county com[388]*388missioners full authority to receive petitions for that purpose, and also, incidentally, to determine whether the signatures to such petitions are genuine, and of persons who are “resident electors of said county.” Neither the courts, nor any other officer or person, have any original jurisdiction in the decision of these questions. And it appears that, in the exercise of the jurisdiction thus conferred, the commissioners received the petition for relocation, and adjudging it in all respects sufficient, made and entered of record this order: “ Whereas on the twentieth day of August, 1877, was presented by Samuel Windrom to the board of county commissioners of Saline county a petition calling for a re-location of the county seat, which said petition was signed in manner required by law by citizens of said county in number more than three-fifths of the votes cast at the last general election.” Thereupon, at the same time, they ordered in due form the calling of the first election on this question, to be held on the fourth of September, 1877.

It does not appear that either the genuineness or the sufficiency of the petition was questioned before the commissioners, but it is alleged that all of the defects complained of were fully known to them when they made the order for the election. And it is further alleged that the plaintiffs were wholly ignorant concerning them until more than twenty days had elapsed after the decision had been made, which seems to be thought a sufficient excuse for not moving earlier in this attack upon the action of the board:

We are of the opinion that under this statute the proper place to have raised these questions concerning the petition was before the commissioners themselves, and that having failed to make the objections there, and no sufficient reason, for the failure being shown, the plaintiffs are in no situation to ask the aid of a court of equity; especially so, when they have rested apparently [389]*389content until three elections, in which they participated, and took the chances of a favorable issue, have been held, and the result finally declared. The fact that the plaintiffs 11 did not know ” of the matters complained of in time to have availed themselves of their legal remedy is entitled to no weight, nor is it a sufficient reason for a resort to the extraordinary remedy here sought.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Neb. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-karl-neb-1878.