McLean v. District Court of the Eighth Judicial District

134 P. 536, 24 Idaho 441, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 160
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 134 P. 536 (McLean v. District Court of the Eighth Judicial District) 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
McLean v. District Court of the Eighth Judicial District, 134 P. 536, 24 Idaho 441, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 160 (Idaho 1913).

Opinion

STEWART, J.

This is an original proceeding in this court for a writ of prohibition, and is based upon an affidavit of Joseph T. Carrol and William Dollar. The facts stated in the affidavit are that Carrol is the vice-president and general manager of the applicant, the Coeur d’Alene Lumber Company, and that Dollar is the secretary-treasurer of the applicant, the Staeks-Gibbs Lumber Company, and that affiants make this affidavit for and in behalf of these applicants and the other applicants, Charles A. McLean and Mrs. Charles A. McLean, husband and wife ¡that the applicant, the Coeur d’Alene Lumber Co., is a corporation created, organized and existing under the laws of the state of Washington and authorized to do business and to acquire and hold property in the state of Idaho with its principal place of business in the city of Coeur d’Alene (which corporation for convenience will hereafter in this opinion be designated the Coeur d’Alene Company); that the applicant, the Staek-Gibbs Lumber Company, is a corpora[448]*448tion created, incorporated, organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Michigan, authorized to do business and acquire and hold property in the state of Idaho, with its principal place of business in Idaho at Gibbs, a suburb of the city of Coeur d’Alene in Kootenai county (which corporation for convenience will hereafter be designated in this opinion the Stack-Gibbs Company); that all of said applicants are the owners of large bodies of timber land situated in Kootenai county, and that the applicants, the Coeur d’Alene Company and the Stack-Gibbs Company, are the owners and operators of large lumber manufacturing plants in the city of Coeur d’Alene and at Gibbs, in said county; that the Renfro Creek Railway Company claims to be a corporation organized and incorporated under the laws of the state of Idaho, and that as plaintiff, on March 7, 1913, filed a complaint in the district court of Kootenai county, in which the applicants herein were made defendants, and in which complaint the said Renfro Creek Railway Co. sought authority from the district court to condemn and appropriate certain lands of the applicants for a pretended railway right of way, a copy of which complaint was made a part of the application in this court; that thereafter on April 19, 1913, the Renfro Creek Railway Co. in said condemnation proceeding filed an amended complaint, which is also made a part of the application; that the Coeur d’Alene Company, the Stack-Gibbs Company and the McLeans each filed answers to the complaint in the condemnation proceeding, all of which answers are annexed to and made a part of the application; that a hearing was had upon the complaint and answer before Honorable Robert Dunn, judge of the district court, who is made a defendant in this action, and that said judge on May 19, 1913, made and signed his findings of fact and conclusions of law which were filed on May 21, 1913', and such findings of fact and conclusions of law are made a part of the application, in favor of the railway company, granting to said railway company the right to condemn and appropriate the lands of the defendants in said condemnation proceedings, the applicants in this proceeding, for a right of wayq that said [449]*449district judge on May 19, 1913, in said condemnation proceeding signed a judgment which was filed May 21, 1913, in favor of the railway company, which judgment is made a part of the application, and in said judgment was incorporated an order appointing Fred J. Russell, S. L. Carmon and O. E. Hailey, defendants in this proceeding, commissioners to assess and appraise the values and damages which McLean and wife, the Coeur d’Alene Company and the Staek-Gibbs Company might sustain by reason of the '"condemnation and appropriation of their lands for said right of way; that said commissioners were qualified as such and served notice on all of the defendants, the applicants in this proceeding, that the commissioners would on May 31st, 1913, proceed to take testimony in said condemnation proceeding, and such notice is made a part of the application; that on May 26, 1913, the defendants in said condemnation proceeding, who are the applicants in this proceeding, filed and served notice of appeal to the supreme court from the judgment and order entered and filed in the condemnation proceeding in favor of the Renfro Railway Co., and the notice of appeal is made a part of the application; that the said applicants on May 26, 1913, executed and filed with the clerk of the district court an undertaking on appeal in due and proper form in the sum of $300, and said undertaking was approved by the clerk of the district court and such appeal has not been withdrawn and is now pending; that the applicants are advised and believe that the taking and perfecting of the appeal in the condemnation proceeding stays all further proceedings in the condemnation proceeding until the hearing and determination of said appeal, but that the trial judge refuses to make an order staying the proceedings in the condemnation action pending the appeal, and refuses to direct or instruct the commissioners appointed to suspend further action during the pendency of the appeal; that the commissioners, in accordance with their notice, give out and threaten that they will proceed to take testimony in said proceeding, and award to the several defendants, who are the applicants in the present proceeding, the value of their lands sought to be [450]*450condemned, and damages, if any they find, and that unless said district judge and said commissioners be restrained and prohibited by writ of prohibition, they will consummate the condemnation proceedings and that the railroad company will take possession of the lands.and build and construct' and operate a railroad over the lands of the applicants; that the district judge and the commissioners are acting without or in excess of their jurisdiction; that under and by virtue of the provisions of secs. 4810, 4811, 4812, 4813, 4814, 4815 and 4817 of the Revised Codes, the perfecting of the appeal by the applicants, who are the defendants in the condemnation proceeding, by act and operation of the law stayed all proceedings in the district court upon the judgment and order appealed from, and that said commissioners have no jurisdiction to act in the said condemnation proceedings pending said appeal until the same is heard and determined.

Then follow allegations which are somewhat lengthy and many of which this court is of the opinion are not essential in determining the issues involved in this ease. The essential and controlling allegations are those which are claimed to show that the railroad company was organized with a capital of $25,000, divided into 25 shares of the par value of $1,000; that 23 of the shares were subscribed by J. F. Cox, the president of the railway company, one share by Reiley and one by King, and that there is no evidence that any of the subscriptions have been allowed and paid; that the subscribers to the stock are men of small means; that Cox and Reiley are not financially able to pay their subscriptions; that the proposed railroad is only four miles long, and that the railway company has no locomotive, cars, rails or other railroad equipment of any kind, and that the rails, locomotives and' other equipment to be used in operating the railroad are leased for a short time only and for temporary purposes only; that the ears to be used are to be furnished for temporary purposes only by another railroad company; that no part of the equipment will become an asset or assets of the railroad company which would be subject to the indebtedness of the railway company; that the railroad, if constructed, will be [451]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 P. 536, 24 Idaho 441, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclean-v-district-court-of-the-eighth-judicial-district-idaho-1913.