Hurd v. People

14 Colo. 207
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 Colo. 207 (Hurd v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurd v. People, 14 Colo. 207 (Colo. 1890).

Opinion

Reed, C.

This was a proceeding before the Honorable William Harrison, judge of the district court of El Paso [208]*208county, against the plaintiff in error for an alleged contempt of court.

On November 2, 1885, plaintiff in error was appointed receiver in a certain proceeding in equity concerning mines and mining property in the county of Park, wherein George O. Bates and Mary Barker Bates were plaintiffs, and Alfred H. Wilson, Bandall W. Wilson and the Woodmas of Alston Mining Company were defendants. By the order of appointment he was to have the sole and exclusive possession of a mining claim and of other property in controversy, work the property, and transact all the necessary business, which he did from the date that he qualified until the 26th day of June, 1886, when the litigation was ended in the court. At that time he had in his hands, as receiver, the proceeds of the mine, amounting to over $19,000. On the last-named ■date a decree was entered as follows:

“The temporary injunction heretofore issued is dissolved, and the receiver is ordered and required to surrender and return to defendants Alfred H. and Bandall W. Wilson, or their authorized agent, full, quiet, peaceable and undisturbed possession of the premises mentioned in the pleadings, and also all books, maps, documents and other personal property in his possession as receiver; the possession of said mine to be yielded to Wil.sons on the 8th day of July, 1886, at 12 o’clock high noon -of that day; and on the same day that the receiver pay to defendants Wilsons, out of the moneys now in his hands, the sum of $16,000, the remainder to be left in his .hands, amounting to some $3,100, to be kept as a fund for the payment of the expenses of said receivership; that the receiver report to this court on July 16, 1886, in what manner he shall have executed this order; that this cause shall stand continued for the purpose of retaining jurisdiction of the receiver, and for the purpose •of hearing and acting upon his final report, and that in •all other respects this cause shall stand dismissed.”

[209]*209On the 6th of July, two days before the date fixed in the decree for the surrender of the property and the payment of the money by the receiver, an appeal was perfected to this court, and bond filed in the sum of $16,000. Of the amount in his hands, the receiver paid over to the defendants $8,000, and, by the advice of counsel for plaintiffs, refused to pay over the other $8,000, and deliver the possession of the property to the defendants.

Upon the 2d day of September, 1886, plaintiff in error was cited before the honorable judge in chambers, in vacation, to answer to a charge of contempt for failing to pay over the remaining $8,000 in money, and deliver the possession of the property; was found guilty, and fined $100. He then sued out this writ of error to have the proceeding reviewed in this court.

The question presented to be determined is, Had the district court jurisdiction after the appeal was perfected? In the suit of Bates v. Wilson el al., ante, page 140, in which plaintiff in error was appointed receiver, the question in controversy was whether plaintiffs were joint owners with the defendants in the property, the interest claimed by plaintiffs being one-half, and naturally or incidentally involved were the questions of right of possession and joint occupancy of the plaintiffs, and the right to share in the money in the hands of the receiver. By the decree it was ordered that the plaintiffs take nothing, and that the suit be dismissed, except that jurisdiction be retained for the receiver to perform the decree, and have his accounts passed. To perform the decree the receiver was to deliver complete possession, and pay over to defendants all moneys in his hands, save the sum' thought necessary to pay the expenses of the receivership. The decree was entire, and from the decree the appeal was taken. The appeal in this case was taken under and controlled by the statute of 1885 (see Sess. Laws, p. 350, § 2), which statute has since been repealed. The decree, although, as above stated, entire, was dual [210]*210in character, but was all covered by the appeal; subdivision 2 of the section above cited being that an appeal will lie from “ a final order made in any special proceedings affecting a substantial right therein, or made in a summary application in an action after judgment.”

A wide distinction is made in proceedings where the supposed contempt is wilful and contumacious, or growing out of some matter incidental to or ancillary, as in cases of this kind, where the supposed contempt grew out of the refusal to obey an order which was, of reasonably might have been, considered by the i-eceiver and his counsel as a process in the execution of the decree from which the appeal was taken.

If the appeal and the filing of the bond operated as a supersedeas, then it of necessity stayed all process and proceedings to carry into effect the decree from which the appeal was taken. That the taking of the appeal, filing of bond, as in this case conditioned, to cover the entire case from which an appeal will lie, operates as a supersedeas, cannot be successfully questioned. The conditions of the bond were such as were required to make the appeal a supersedeas, as required by statute. Sess. Laws 1885, § 23, p. 354. It also appears from the record that the bond was approved, and that the clerk issued the written order commanding the stay of proceedings, as required in the latter part of the section above cited. In this case the appeal bond was executed and filed for the express purpose, and immediately operated as a stay and supersedeas, under the statute. See Daniels v. Miller, 8 Colo. 542. Under the New York code, which is very similar to ours, in How v. Searing, 6 Bosw. 684, Woodruff, J., said: “By the express terms * * -* of the code, the perfecting of an appeal * * * by giving the undertaking mentioned * * * shall stay all proceedings in the court below upon the judgment appealed from. If, therefore, this motion is a proceeding ‘upon the judgment.,’ the motion is improperly and irregularly made; for as to all such proceedings the [211]*211plaintiff’s hands are tied, and if an attachment and a commitment thereunder for disobeying the judgment appealed from, while the appeal is pending, are ‘proceedings upon the judgment,’ then the motion therefor cannot be granted, for not only the action of the plaintiff, but the action of the court therein, is stayed pending the appeal.”

It also appears from the record that the appeal was perfected, the bond filed, and the supersedeas effective two days before the receiver was ordered by the decree to perform the acts the failure to perform which was punished as contempt. The practice in chancery, before the modification by statute, did not allow an appeal from an order granting- or dissolving an injunction. Hart v. Mayor, 3 Paige, Ch. 380; Graves v. Maguire, 6 Paige, Ch. 379.

By our statute (Sess. Laws 18.8o, subd. 3, § 2, p. 350) an appeal will lie “when an order grants or refuses, continues or modifies, a provisional remedy, or grants, refuses, dissolves, or refuses to dissolve, an injunction.” The decree being general,— an entirety, — the appeal lay from, and the stay by supersedeas reached, every part of the decree appealed from. In Graves v. Maguire, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
14 Colo. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurd-v-people-colo-1890.