Fayerweather v. Monson

23 A. 878, 61 Conn. 431
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 20, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 23 A. 878 (Fayerweather v. Monson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fayerweather v. Monson, 23 A. 878, 61 Conn. 431 (Colo. 1892).

Opinion

Fene, J.

This is an application to the Superior Court in New Haven County for a writ of prohibition. The mateterial allegations of the application are, that one of the applicants, the Goodyear India Rubber Glove Manufacturing Company, on September 3d, 1891, .brought a writ of attachment against the Union Waterproof Shoe Company of New Haven, which was issued, to secure a debt then justly due, and upon which writ an attachment was made ; that after-wards the other applicant, Fayerweather & Ladew, filed a petition in the court of probate for the district of New Haven, praying that said Waterproof Shoe Company be adjudged insolvent and a trustee appointed; that on the filing of the petition the court of probate issued an order of notice requiring the latter company to appear and show cause to the contrary, on Hovember 4th, 1891, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon; that on the 3d of Hovember, 1891, no other creditor having intervened, the said Fayerweather & Ladew, in pursuance of a satisfactory arrangement between them and the attaching creditor, withdrew the petition from the court of probate, by a writing, duly signed and filed in said court, and thereupon disappeared, and said petition was no longer *437 pending in said court; that on said 4th day of November, 1891, the said Monson and the other defendant, Beecher, made application to the judge of said court of probate to revive the petition, so withdrawn, and to permit them to intervene therein and procure the appointment of a trustee thereunder, claiming that unless the petition was so revived said attachment would have matured, and would not be affected by voluntary proceedings in insolvency; and that thereupon the judge undertook to revive the petition, and allow such intervention, but stated that, in the absence of counsel for the applicants, he would continue the proceedings until the next day, at which time, notice having been given to said counsel in the meantime, so that they might appear and be heard in the selection of a trustee, he would appoint a trustee under the petition; and the application concludes with allegations of proposed procedure, without jurisdiction, for the sole reason of causing the attachment of one of the complainants to be dissolved, and thereby also to defeat the arrangement made between the complainants, ■and praying for a rule to show cause. The rule being granted and service made, the defendants appeared and pleaded to the jurisdiction, and prayed that the application be dismissed, alleging five grounds, (but the first three of which may be considered as one, and called first;) namely, that inasmuch as the insolvent was a New Haven corporation, the court of probate had jurisdiction, and that it did not appear from the application that the court was in any manner exceeding its jurisdiction, or held, or attempted to hold, plea of any matter or cause whereof by law it has no cognizance. Second; “ because the matters set forth and alleged in said application, being within the jurisdiction and cognizance of said court of probate, the remedy prescribed by law for the applicants is by appeal from the order of said court declaring said corporation insolvent, and not by recourse to the extraordinary remedy of prohibition.” Third; “ because before the making of this application for a writ of prohibition, said court of probate had rendered judgment upon the petition to declare said corporation insolvent, and *438 had admitted intervening creditors as parties thereto; and had adjudged said corporation insolvent, and had appointed a time for the appointment of a trustee thereunder, and issued an order of notice thereof, which had been published.”

To this plea the plaintiffs demurred, “ for the reason that the matters therein alleged are insufficient under the law to justify a trial under said plea.”

The Superior Court found as follows: — “ The court, having heard the parties upon said pleadings, both as to the sufficiency of the facts set forth in the complaint, and as to the sufficiency of the facts alleged in the plea to the jurisdiction, holds said facts not sufficient to warrant the issuing of the writ, and finds the issue, for the defendants; ” and thereupon the rule was ordered discharged and the application dismissed.

The plaintiffs appealed, assigning as reasons : first, error in the judgment of the court, for the reasons stated in such judgment; second, that the court erred in considering the sufficiency of the facts alleged in the complaint, as such question was not before the court; third, in holding such facts insufficient.

• The defendants in this court filed a motion to erase the appeal, alleging that the granting or refusal of a rule, on the application for a writ of prohibition, was a matter within the discretion of the Superior Court, and so is not the subject of an appeal; and that the defendants not having been required to answer, and the rule to show cause having been discharged, no such final judgment has been rendered in the Superior Court as will form the basis of an appeal to this court. This motion was not separately discussed, but was presented with the other questions in the briefs and oral arguments, so that it remains to be disposed of; and we will first consider it. And in doing so, we do not find it necessary to determine whether, under the English practice the granting of the writ of prohibition was, at common law, in all cases discretionary, or whether, when application was made by the party aggrieved, the writ was to such party a matter of right, or to decide in what cases, by such practice, *439 a writ of error lay, because we agree throughout with the position taken by the defendants upon the other branches of the case, that whatever jurisdiction the Superior Court or a judge thereof has, in this state, in reference to the matter, is given by the provisions of section 1299 of the Gen. Statutes, by which it appears that when a rule to show cause is granted, if the party defendant shall appear, he may plead any proper matter of defence, and said court or judge may examine and decide upon the truth, as well as the sufficiency, of the facts arising in the cause; and if they find sufficient ground, shall issue a writ of prohibition; * * * but if no sufficient reason appear for granting a writ of prohibition, costs shall be taxed in favor of the party complained of.” It would seem, therefore, manifest that the granting or refusal of the writ is dependent upon the truth and sufficiency of the facts arising in the cause, and not upon the discretion of the court or judge; and that by “ sufficient ground ” and “ sufficient reason,” a legal sufficiency in the facts averred and found must be understood. The finding of facts, though not reviewable, is not an exercise of discretion. Nothing can be said to be true or false, proved or disproved, in the discretion of a court. And the legal sufficiency of facts averred or facts found is to be tested by fixed principles of law, and is not the subject of discretion. In this case the Superior Court did not assume or undertake to exercise any discretionary power. It discharged the rule and dismissed the application solely because, upon a plea to the jurisdiction, it held that'it had none; that the facts averred were insufficient in law to confer it. To speak of this as an exercise of discretion, if full discretionary power existed, would be absurd. In Thompsonville Scale Manufacturing Company v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 A. 878, 61 Conn. 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fayerweather-v-monson-conn-1892.