Idaho Comstock Mining & Milling Co. v. Lundstrum

74 P. 975, 9 Idaho 257, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 43
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 74 P. 975 (Idaho Comstock Mining & Milling Co. v. Lundstrum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Idaho Comstock Mining & Milling Co. v. Lundstrum, 74 P. 975, 9 Idaho 257, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 43 (Idaho 1903).

Opinion

STOCKSLAGER, J.

Counsel for respondents file their motion to dismiss the appeal in this case alleging insufficiency of the notice of appeal, improper service of the notice, and insufficiency of the undertaking on appeal.

■ It seems that the Idaho Comstock Mining and Milling Company commenced its -action in the district court of Idaho county against Frank Lundstrum, appellant, alleging ownership of a [263]*263large number- of mining claims^ both placer and quartz, in said Idaho county, together with certain tools, machinery, buildings, mining appliances, etc., and that Lundstrum on or about the first day of December, 1901, without right, took- possession of certain personal property of plaintiff’s and threatens to sell the same. That the plaintiff is not indebted to the said Lundstrum in any sum whatever. That defendant’s pretended lien upon which he withholds the possession of said property from plaintiff is without merit or foundation.

The prayer of plaintiff’s complaint is: “That defendant be restrained by injunction from selling, disposing of or removing or in anywise interfering with any of the said property mentioned in the complaint and particularly set forth in defendant’s notice of sale, etc. That defendant be enjoined from in anywise interfering with plaintiff in its possession or operation of its said mining property described in this complaint. That it be decreed that defendant’s said pretense and claim of lien upon the said property is invalid and wholly without right, and that he be perpetually restrained from asserting the same against the said property of this plaintiff. And that plaintiff have judgment against the defendant for two thousand ($2,000) dollars damages, etc.”

Defendant in his .answer admits that plaintiff is a corporation as alleged in the complaint. Also admits that plaintiff is the owner of the mining property described in the complaint and all other property described, save and except that portion known and described as an “assay outfit,” which he avers is the property of one W. H. Phelps. All other allegations of the complaint are denied.

By way of cross-complaint the Bank of Camas Prairie and William Steinheiser -were made parties to the action, in order that there might be a full and fair determination of all the conflicting interests to the property in controversy. The Bank of Camas Prairie and William Steinheiser answered the cross-complaint of plaintiff, denying generally and specifically all of the allegations of the cross-complaint. The cross-complaint •is also answered by the plaintiff denying all the allegations ■thereof.

[264]*264A trial was had by the court and judgment rendered in favor of the defendant Lundstrum for the sum of eleven hundred and one ($1101) dollars. The court further found that plaintiff was entitled to an order restaining and enjoining the defendant from in any manner interfering with the property of the plaintiff, both personal and real. Judgment was entered in accord with said findings. A motion for new trial was filed and statement on motion was settled and allowed by the court.

Thereafter an appeal was taken both from the judgment and the order overruling the motion for new trial. Respondent, the Comstock Mining and Milling Company, and respondents, Bank of Camas Prairie and William Steinheiser, file motions to dismiss the appeal. The latter two respondents file their joint motion. The grounds as set out in the motion of the bank and William Steinheiser are as follows: 1. That no notice of appeal as required by law has been served upon them or filed with the clerk of the said district court. That the paper purporting to be a notice of appeal filed herein and set forth in the transcript in the action is entitled, “In the Cause of the Idaho Mining and Milling Company, Plaintiff and Respondent, Against Frank Lundstrum, Defendant and Appellant.” That the said notice of appeal neither in caption or title, nor in the body thereof, in any way names, mentions or refers to these respondents, nor is the same directed or addressed to these respondents nor to their attorney, but, to the contrary, is directed solely to the attorneys of the said plaintiff, the Idaho Comstock Mining and Milling Company. That the said notice does not describe any judgment, decision or order of this court rendered upon any issues between the said appellants and these respondents, but, to the contrary, in terms names “A certain judgment rendered in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff.” The said notice in no way purports to be a notice of appeal from the order, decision or judgment of the said district court dismissing the said defendant’s cross-complaint, nor from the order refusing and denying the said defendant a new trial upon the said cross-complaint. That said notice for the foregoing reasons, as well as because of other defects, is wholly insufficient, invalid and void.

[265]*265The second ground of the motion assails the undertaking on appeal on the ground that no sufficient undertaking has been filed; that the transcript herein does not contain a certificate of the clerk of the said district court or of the attorneys herein; that an undertaking on appeal in due form has not been properly filed nor a stipulation of the parties waiving an undertaking; that the paper purporting to be a copy of an undertaking set out in the transcript herein is not shown either by certificate of the clerk or of the attorneys to have been properly filed or filed at all in said action in said court; that said paper so contained in the transcript is wholly insufficient, invalid and void in this: that it is not entitled in any action to which these respondents are parties; that these respondents are not named as obligees in said undertaking either by direct recital in the body of the undertaking or by reference to the title of the undertaking or otherwise; that the said undertaking does not describe the judgment to which either of these respondents are parties, but, to the contrary, describes said judgment as a judgment in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff; that these respondents are not, and were not, plaintiffs, in the said district court to the said action, or any action set out in the said transcript. That the order from which the said defendant is recited in said undertaking to have appealed from is not the order mentioned or described in the notice of appeal nor the order set forth in the transcript herein, but to the contrary is described to be an order made by the court and entered in the minutes of said court, and that said undertaking is not in conformity to the said notice of appeal.

The separate motion of the Idaho Comstock Company sets forth similar grounds as far as applicable to that of respondents.

The notice of appeal as shown by the transcript is as follows:

“To Messrs. Fogg & Nugent, Attorneys of the Above-named Plaintiff in the Above-entitled Action:

“You will please take notice that the defendant in the above-entitled action hereby appeals to the supreme court of the state of Idaho from the judgment herein rendered and entered in the district court of the second judicial district of the state of Idaho, in and for Idaho county, in favor of the defendant and [266]*266against the plaintiff on the twenty-third day of February,- 1-903,- and from the whole thereof; and also appeals from the order denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial made by the judge of said court and entered and filed on the records of said court upon the nineteenth day of March, 1903.

“Signed: L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 P. 975, 9 Idaho 257, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/idaho-comstock-mining-milling-co-v-lundstrum-idaho-1903.