Golden Gate Consolidated Hydraulic Mining Co. v. Superior Court

3 P. 628, 65 Cal. 187, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 487
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1884
DocketNo. 9,402
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 3 P. 628 (Golden Gate Consolidated Hydraulic Mining Co. v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golden Gate Consolidated Hydraulic Mining Co. v. Superior Court, 3 P. 628, 65 Cal. 187, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 487 (Cal. 1884).

Opinion

McKinstry, J.

The return to the writ of review shows that in the action, County of Yuba v. Golden Gate Consolidated Hydraulic Mining Company, an injunction was issued, esc parte, commanding the defendant, its officers, agents, servants, etc., until the further order of the court, “to desist and refrain from depositing or suffering to flow into the channel or bed of the Yuba River, or into the channel or bed of Sucker Flat Ravine, or into the tributary streams, gulches, or ravines which lead into said river or ravine, any of the tailings from defendant’s hydraulic mines, or the earth, sand, clay, sediment, stones, or other material discharged from said mines, commonly called mining debris.” The defendant in that action was by the Superior Court adjudged guilty of three several contempts in [189]*189violating the injunction order. We are asked to annul the contempt judgments and the orders which preceded them.

It is claimed by petitioner that the injunction is void, because no notice was given petitioner of the application for it. Section 531 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that an injunction, “to suspend the general and ordinary business of a corporation,” cannot be granted “ without due notice of the application therefor to the proper officers or managing agent of the corporation.”

It is obvious that petitioner cannot have the order for the injunction annulled, because he had an appeal from the order granting the injunction. (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 963, 1068.)

The point of petitioner is, that inasmuch as the injunction was void, the petitioner, its servants, etc., were not bound to obey it, and the Superior Court had no jurisdiction to punish as for contempt any disobedience of it. But the injunction did not suspend the general and ordinary business of the corporation “ in buying and selling mining claims, or in working them,” but only suspended its conduct of mining operations, in a particular manner alleged to injure the plaintiff in the action in which the injunction ivas issued.

It is further said by petitioner that the injunction was never served on it—the defendant in the action, County of Yuba v. Golden Gate Company—because the person on whom it was served was not an officer or agent of the corporation when the service was made.

The affidavit of service states that the server personally served the injunction on “ W. J. Madden, superintendent and managing agent of said defendant.” The subsequent statement that he was “informed and believes” that Madden was superintendent and managing agent, does not detract from the previous statement. He could know the fact only from information derived from some source. The return was prima fade evidence of the fact. (Rowe v. Table Mountain W. Co. 10 Cal. 441.)

It is also urged that the court, issuing the writ of certiorari, will review the evidence when the jurisdiction of the court to which the writ issues depends upon such evidence; that we should look into the affidavits used on a motion to quash the service. If this be conceded, still, where the evidence is conflicting, and there is evidence tending to prove the fact on which [190]*190jurisdiction depends, this court must hold that the court which decided the fact had jurisdiction. Such is the case here. Besides, there is evidence that the petitioner, its officers and agents, had actual notice of the injunction. If it and they had such actual notice, they were bound by the injunction, although it was not served at all. (High on Injunctions, 2d ed. §§ 14, 21, 22,23, 24, and notes; Ex parte Cottrell, 59 Cal. 421.)

It is further claimed that an injunction can be served only by the sheriff, and counsel for petitioner cites subdivision 8 of section 4176 of the Political Code: “The sheriff must serve all process and notices in the manner prescribed by law.” The section is found in the chapter defining the duties of sheriff, and does not give to or impose upon him exclusively the duty of serving all process and notices, but requires of him to serve all process and notices directed to him, or placed in his hands for service, which the law commands him to serve when addressed or handed to him. The Code of Civil Procedure does not provide how or by whom an injunction shall be served, but the important matter is that the party enjoined shall have notice, and the statute being silent, it is at the most sufficient if service is made in conformity with the mode prescribed with reference to service of summons. And this seems to be intimated in Edmondson v. Mason, 16 Cal. 388.

The petitioner argues that a corporation cannot commit a contempt. It has been held that a municipal corporation cannot be attached for violation of an injunction, but that its officers who disobey the writ may be. (London v. Lynn, 1 Black, 206; Davis v. Mayor etc. 1 Duer, 451; Bass v. City of Shakopee, 27 Minn. 250.) But other corporations may be punished for contempts. (The People v. Albany etc. R. 12 Abb. Pr. 171; 20 How. 358; United States v. Memphis etc. R. 6 Fed. Rep. 237; The Mayor etc. of N. Y. v. Staten Is. Ferry Co. 64 N. Y. 624.)

Petitioner contends that the affidavits on which contempt proceedings were initiated were insufficient to give the court jurisdiction, because the facts constituting the alleged contempt were not stated therein positively, nor were they described. The facts are set out showing a clear violation of the injunction by the defendant, petitioner here. It is true they are stated on information and belief. But the jurisdiction of the court to adjudge [191]*191a contempt, committed out of its presence, does not depend upon the form of the affidavit which sets the proceedings in motion. Here an order to show cause was made, and, if it was served, the defendant had an opportunity to appear and answer any contempt alleged against it. The omissions in the affidavit, upon which the order was made, may have been irregularities, but the commitment was not based upon such affidavits, but upon the oral testimony of witnesses, and documentary evidence given and introduced on the return day of the order to show cause. In each case the Superior Court found that the defendant, on a certain day, in violation of said injunction, and in contempt of the order of the court, did operate its mine, etc., and deposit and flow its debris, etc. It is not our province to inquire whether the court below was justified in. finding the existence of the facts which constituted the contempt. (Ex parte Cottrel, 59. Cal. 420; Ex parte Perkins, 18 Cal. 60.)

The several orders to show cause why the defendant should not be punished for contempt in disobeying the injunction were served upon attorneys for defendant. Section 1015 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that, when a party has an attorney in an action, the service of papers, when required, must be upon the attorney, except .... of papers to bring him in contempt. And section 1016 reads: “The foregoing provisions of this chapter do not apply to the service of summons or other process, or of any paper to bring a party into contempt.”

Section 1212 provides, that when a contempt is not committed in the immediate presence of the court, a warrant of commitment may be granted “upon an order to show cause.”

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Bluebook (online)
3 P. 628, 65 Cal. 187, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-gate-consolidated-hydraulic-mining-co-v-superior-court-cal-1884.