Ex parte Wimberly

57 Miss. 437
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 57 Miss. 437 (Ex parte Wimberly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Wimberly, 57 Miss. 437 (Mich. 1879).

Opinion

Chalmers, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The relator.who has, by the Hon. A. B. Fly, Chancellor of the Second Judicial District, been committed to six months’ imprisonment and sentenced to pay a fine of one thousand dollars for a contempt of court in violating an injunction issued to and served upon him, brings this writ of habeas corpus for the purpose of regaining his liberty. That he violated the injunction is not denied: the claim is that it was a nullity because the Chancery Court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter sought to be enjoined; The relator had been a candidate at the late general election in this State for the office of chancery clerk of Yalobusha County. The registrars of the countjs adjudging that his opponent Brannon had been and that he had not been elected, delivered to Brannon the customary certificate of election. Thereupon the relator, within the time and in the mode prescribed by law (Acts 1878, p. 173), instituted before a justice of the peace the proper proceedings for contesting the election. A few days before the time fixed for the trial, Brannon sought and obtained from the Chancellor in vacation, upon grounds to be hereafter noted, an order enjoining and restraining the relator from prosecuting said suit. In violation of the injunction, the contest before the justice was proceeded with, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the relator. It is for this conduct that he has been committed to jail, and it is the validity of the injunction that we are called upon to determine.

He who knowingly disregards or violates the orders of a court of general jurisdiction acts at his peril, and subjects himself, if the orders be lawful, to a punishment which ordinarily is left to the discretion of the tribunal whose authority has been defied, and from which no other court can release him. From consequences so severe there is usually but one method of escape, viz., by showing that the court whose commands have been disregarded was without jurisdiction of the person over whom, or the subject-matter over which, it assumed to exercise its authority. It will not avail the offender that the order was improvidently made upon insufficient grounds, and would be reversed by a higher tribunal; nor that the court issuing it was not justified in making the particular [445]*445order that was disobeyed, but should have made another and a. different one. Neither can he urge that, upon the allegations contained in the application for the order, no facts were stated which made out a case against him or entitled the applicant to any relief. All these are matters to be considered by the court that makes the order, and by the tribunal which reviews its action on appeal; but they cannot be decided by the party himself. It is sufficient for him that a court, which by the laws of his country had the right to consider the subject, has passed its judgment upon it. If that judgment be wrong, he must ask its correction where it was rendered, or appeal to some higher power for relief. If, instead of doing this, he determines to disregard it and take the consequences, he can make those consequences innocuous only by showing that there was an inherent want of jurisdiction in the court to make any order whatever on the subject.

The want of jurisdiction here referred to is something widely different from the sense in which the words are used when we say that a court of law has no jurisdiction to settle a partnership account, or that a court of equity cannot entertain a suit sounding wholly in damages; because it frequently admits of doubt, in the inception of a litigation, whether the particular suit before the court should not have been instituted in some other tribunal; and while the court is considering this question and evolving the facts necessary to its determination, its authority must be respected and its orders obeyed. When we say that a person may safely disobey the commands of a court which is without jurisdiction to issue them, we mean either that it has failed to give, or is incapable for some reason of giving, legal notice to the person whose rights are to be affected, or that the subject-matter of the controversy is one which that court has no right to consider in any aspect whatever. Thus, if a court of law should assume jurisdiction of a suit for divorce, and issue an order for alimony pendente lite, the person against whom it was entered might safely disregard it. So, if a court of chancery should undertake to interfere in any way with a criminal prosecution, or to enjoin a convicted person from asking for an executive pardon, its action would be utterly null, and might be so treated by every one. These illustrations [446]*446enable us to appreciate the difference between that class of cases where there may or may not be jurisdiction — according as a full development of the facts may show that relief is to be sought in the one forum or the other, and where consequently it is the duty of the court first applied to to have the facts developed, with a view of determining the question of jurisdiction — and that other class of cases where it is at once perceived, from a mere mention of the subject-matter of controversy, that no condition of facts can give jurisdiction. In the one case, the orders of the court must be respected. In the other, they may be treated as the impotent commands of a private person masquerading in the guise of judicial authority. Let us test the case at bar by these principles, and see under which class it falls.

The relator had instituted, in the mode and manner and before the tribunal specially constituted for that purpose, a proceeding to test the question whether he or his opponent had received the greater number of legal votes. He was enjoined from prosecuting that contest until such time had elapsed that a decision in his favor would be immediately succeeded by a term of the Circuit Court of the county, so that his enjoyment of the profits of the office would be short-lived if there should be a reversal in the higher court. The grounds of the application were that the justice of the peace before whom the case was to be tried was a political supporter and a bitter partisan of the relator; that the constable of the court was his brother; that a judgment in his favor would certainly be rendered without regard to the merits of the contest; and that, inasmuch as an appeal did not by the terms of the statute operate as a supersedeas, he would, if the case was tried at once, enjoy for a period of five or six months the emoluments of an office to which he had not been elected. It is at once perceived that these grounds were wholly insufficient to justify the issuance of the injunction or any other relief whatever. That a judge is the political or personal friend of a litigant constitutes no ground for enjoining the prosecution of a suit before him, even where he is the sole trier of the facts, and still less so where, as in this case, the issue was to be determined by a jury; nor does the fact [447]*447that the jury is to be summoned by a sheriff or constable who is related to the opposing party add any strength to the objections to proceeding with the trial. It is quite manifest that the injunction was improvidently granted, and doubtless would have been, and certainly should have been, dissolved upon motion. This, however, as we have seen, affords no excuse for violating it if under any possible state of facts its issuance would have been within the power of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Miss. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-wimberly-miss-1879.