First National Bank of Sundance v. Moorcroft Ranch Co.

36 P. 821, 5 Wyo. 50, 1894 Wyo. LEXIS 17
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 36 P. 821 (First National Bank of Sundance v. Moorcroft Ranch Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Sundance v. Moorcroft Ranch Co., 36 P. 821, 5 Wyo. 50, 1894 Wyo. LEXIS 17 (Wyo. 1894).

Opinion

Gboesbeck, Chiee.Justice.,

It appears from, .the record- that in the three eases, above •entitled, the First -National- Bank:of Sundance had secured orders of attachment against- .the defendants, -and. that the property of the Moorcroft-Ranch Company was seized thereunder. Motions were made to dissolve and discharge these attachments .as-to all-of the.'property attached,.which were heard by the judge of the district court in vacation, ..-under the power .expressly eonferred.by the statute, -Sec. -2910,--Rev. Stat. On this hearing, the attachments were dissolved by -the judge in vacation. • Thereafter, the plaintiff .-in error,- who was the plaintiff below, moved-the court .at a..succeeding term, upon reasonable -notice to the defendants in error-given dur ing vacation, to open,, set aside and vacate: the order; of the judge in vacation dissolving the attachments for--the reasons stated in each of '.the. motions “that said order of dissolution óf said attachment was procured through the fraudulent representations of defendant, Moorcroft Ranch--Company,-.-and by misrepresentations by said, defendant of the facts- touching said attachment and without the court or plaintiff’s being ..correctly advised in. regard to' said attachment; and through -.the defendant’s purposely-misleading the 'court and plaintiff as-to the facts relating to said attachment.-’-’ An-affidavit was filed in support-of this motion and made-a-part thereof; whieh-we shall consider hereafter.- ■ The Moorcroft RancH Company ap[54]*54peared specially and moved the court to strike from its files the said motions of plaintiff in error, mainly upon the ground that the proceeding to vacate the order of the judge in vacation and for a re-hearing on the ground of fraud alleged in the motion, should have been by petition, duly verified, setting forth the order sought to be vacated and the grounds therefor, and by summons issued thereon to be served as in the commencement of an action.

This motion to strike from the files the said motion of plaintiff in error was sustained by the court, the preamble to the order stating that the court “had fully considered said motion of plaintiffs and also said motion of defendants to dismiss the same and strike from the files.”

Fo proceeding in error has been instituted to review the order of the judge in vacation dissolving the attachments, and no stay of the order appears to have been allowed. The question presented here, then, is the alleged error of the district court in sustaining the motion to strike from the files the motion of plaintiff in error to vacate the order dissolving the attachments and for a re-hearing and the consequent dismissal of such motion.

The code provides for the modification or vacation of a judgment or order of the district court by that court after the term at which the same was made, and the method of procedure is pointed out. On the ground of fraud practiced by the successful party in obtaining a judgment or order there must be a petition verified by affidavit setting forth the judgment or order, the grounds for vacating or modifying it, and on such a petition, summons- must issue as in the commencement of an action. Rev. Stat., Sec. 2701, 2705. This method was not pursued in this proceeding, but the relief is sought by motion supported by affidavit, filed in vacation, notice of which was served in vacation, the hearing of which was fixed in the notice of the motion on the first day of the next succeeding term of the district court. This is claimed to be sufficient by counsel for plaintiff in error, as the order sought to be vacated is not an order of the district court, but that of its judge at chambers, and hence does not fall within [55]*55the proceedings regulated by the code, which it is asserted, apply only to the vacation of an order of the district court, and not to the order of its judge. As has been stated herein, the judge of the district court in vacation may hear and decide a motion to discharge an attachment, as well as the court itself, as this authority is expressly conferred by the code. The order dissolving or sustaining an attachment, when made by a court, is undoubtedly a final order and may be reviewed bn proceedings in error instituted before judgment. This was the ruling in Ohio, under code provisions similar to ours. Watson v. Sullivan, 5 O. S., 43; Harrison v. King, 9 Id., 388; Gans v. Thompson et al., 11 Id., 579; Code Civ. Proc., Wyo. Rev. Stat., Sec. 3126, 3128. This rule is not a universal one but is supported by sound decisions under code provisions similar to ours. Sutherlin v. Underwriter’s Agency, 53 Ga., 442; Bruce v. Conyers, 54 Id., 680; Schlemmer v. Myerstein, 19 How. Pr., 412; Rauscher v. McElhinney, 11 Mo., App. 434. Under our code, it may be that proceedings in error would not lie from the order of the judge in vacation upon attachment proceedings, as it- is a judgment rendered or final order made by the district court, which may be reversed, vacated or modified by the supreme court, for errors appearing on the record (Rev. Stat., Sec. 3128) and no provision seems to be made in express words permitting the review of a final order made by a judge at chambers. In some jurisdictions, courts of general and superior original jurisdiction, akin to our district courts,' are by statute or by constitutional provision considered to be open at all times for the. hearing of motions and settling pleadings, but we have no such statute. It is doubtful if the action of the judge at chambers may be considered as that of the court itself,' at term time. Atwood et al. v. Whipple, 48 O. S., 312. Howéver, in this State, the district court is composed of a single judge, and it may be that the Ohio decision last cited does not apply. The order of the judge in vacation in disposing of the ancillary attachment proceedings in a ease, is as effective as the order of the' same judge sitting as a court in term time, and terminates such proceedings as fully as would an order of the court in such [56]*56proceedings. We do not deem it proper to pass upon-these close questions of practice and construction of tbe code in this proceeding, which we have mentioned in order to call the attention of the bar to- them, as the case may be disposed of on other grounds.-

Conceding that the proceedings; by-motion to-vacate the order of dissolution- and for a -re-hearing .were .regular or formal, of which we have grave .doubts, neither; the motion of-plaintiif in error to vacate, the order dissolving or-discharging the attachments and for a re-hearing .on the motions to dissolve, nor the affidavit in support of .such motion to vacate, nor both of them considered together, is sufficient to warrant the relief asked by plaintiff in error. -The order of the court striking the motion and affidavit from its files might not have been the proper procedure, but the right result was.reached, as no. sufficient showing was made to call for the-setting aside of the order made by the. judge in.vacation.; The motion itself makes but general allegations, -while the affidavit sets forth the grounds of fraud, .concealment, misrepresentation and misleading influence of the: adverse party,- which it. is claimed operated to secure, the order, of dissolution. A review-of-the affidavit, which-was filed in -each-case, we think; will conclusively show that the plaintiff in. error, .was not entitled to a review of the, attachment, proceedings and a vacation -of the. order of dissolution. ■, The affidavit .is made by the.

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Bluebook (online)
36 P. 821, 5 Wyo. 50, 1894 Wyo. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-sundance-v-moorcroft-ranch-co-wyo-1894.