McLean v. Territory

71 P. 926, 8 Ariz. 195, 1903 Ariz. LEXIS 59
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1903
DocketCivil No. 815
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 71 P. 926 (McLean v. Territory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona 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. Territory, 71 P. 926, 8 Ariz. 195, 1903 Ariz. LEXIS 59 (Ark. 1903).

Opinion

DOAN, J.

An action was brought on July 15, 1902, in the district court of Maricopa County by A. J. Edwards, district attorney, upon the complaint of H. F. Secrist et al., as plaintiffs, in the nature of quo warranto proceedings against C. .B. McLean et al., defendants, for the purpose of inquiring into the right of the said defendants to exercise the duties and privileges of members of the board of directors of the Keystone Copper and Gold Mining Company, a corporation, wherein the plaintiffs prayed the judgment of the court that the plaintiffs are the legally elected and qualified directors of the said company; that the defendants are not the legally [197]*197elected and qualified directors thereof, and that the defendants surrender and deliver to the plaintiffs the books, papers, files, and property of the corporation; and that the plaintiffs have judgment for their costs. The defendants were all residents of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. Service of summons by publication was had upon them and copies of the summons and complaint were mailed to them severally at that address. Upon the failure of the defendants to file an answer, their default was on September 9, 1902, duly entered against them; and upon the trial of the case on September 10, 1902, upon motion of the plaintiffs, judgment by default was entered against the defendants, wherein it was adjudged by the court that “the said defendants are in default, and that the matters and things alleged against them, and each of them, in the said, complaint, are taken to be by them confessed as true. Wherefore it is adjudged by the court that the said defendants are each and all guilty of the unlawful intrusion into the office of members of the board of directors of the Keystone Copper and Gold Mining Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the territory of Arizona, and of usurping the same, and of excluding the above-named complainants therefrom. And it is further adjudged and decreed by the court that the said complainants . . . were . . . and are now the lawfully elected board of directors of the said . . . corporation, . . . and entitled to the exercise of the rights and privileges and to the discharge of the duties thereof, and the said defendants are, and each of them is, enjoined from interfering with the said complainants, or any of them, therein.”

Thereafter; on November 19, 1902, the defendants sued out a writ of error removing the judgment rendered as aforesaid to this court for revision and correction, and 'afterwards, on December 9, 1902, filed in the lower court an assignment of error as follows:

“(1) The court erred in rendering judgment against the plaintiffs in error without first having obtained any jurisdiction whatever over either the person of the said plaintiffs in error or of the subject-matter of the action.

“ (2) The court erred in rendering judgment against the plaintiffs in error without having first filed a statement of the evidence produced upon the trial of this cause, which should have been signed and approved by the judge, and made a part of the record hereof.

[198]*198“(3) The court erred in rendering judgment against the plaintiffs in error on the pleadings, without first having heard and taken evidence to sustain the allegations in such pleadings.

‘ ‘ (4) The court erred in rendering judgment against the plaintiffs in error, in that said judgment was rendered and after the default'of the plaintiffs in error was entered.”

It seems to us that there are two reasons that preclude our reviewing this case; the one being that it calls for a review of a judgment by default without any motion having been made in the lower court to open the default and grant a new trial,wherein the court of original jurisdiction might have an opportunity to correct any errors that it might have committed, and the other reason being that if the lower court had no jurisdiction over the person of the defendants or the subject-matter of the action, as alleged, its judgment was absolutely void, and the proper procedure by the plaintiffs in error was by motion in the lower court rather than by review in this— the appellate—court.

The first error assigned would have been proper ground on which to base a motion to annul and vacate the judgment and dismiss the case, while the last three errors assigned would each have been proper ground upon which to base a motion for a new trial; and we seriously question the right of the plaintiffs in error to come into an appellate court to have an action of the lower court reviewed, without having ever presented these questions to the court of original jurisdiction for its action thereon. It is urged that our statute of 1901 provides, in paragraph 1493, that “an appeal or writ of error may be taken to the supreme court from any final judgment of the district court rendered in civil cases, and from any of the orders mentioned in section 1214, which the supreme court has jurisdiction to review.” But under the New York statute relative to appeals, very similar to ours (section 348 of their code providing for an appeal “in all cases”), the court of appeals of that state, in Flake v. Van Wagenen, 54 N. Y. 25, said: 1 ‘ The sole question for our determination is whether the general term erred in dismissing the appeal on the ground that the judgment by default was not appealable. That it did not err is quite clear. The general term is an appellate tribunal clothed with power to review the errors of inferior tribunals and of the supreme court at the circuit or special [199]*199term. As well said by the chancellor in Gelston v. Hoyt, 13 Johns. 561: ‘The very theory and constitution of a court of appellate jurisdiction only is the correction of errors which a court below may have committed; and a court below cannot be said to have' committed an error when their judgment was never called into exercise, and the point of law was never taken into consideration, but was abandoned by the acquiescence or default of the party who raised it.’ . . . The remedy of a party in such case is to apply to the court to have the default opened, or to have the order or judgment set aside, and he can thus obtain all the relief he ought to have. . . . The defendant claims, however, that since the amendment of section 348 of the code, in 1851, providing for an appeal to the general term from a judgment entered upon the direction of a single judge ‘in all cases,’ an appeal from a judgment entered by default may be taken. This provision has reference to cases tried and decided by single judges áfter hearing the parties, and where judgment has been directed after examining the issues of law or fact. The section must have some such limitation. A party certainly could not appeal from a judgment to which he had expressly assented, although entered under the direction of a single judge; and no more can he from a judgment to which he has impliedly assented by his default. ’ ’ The later decisions collated from states having statutes similar on this point to ours and to that of New York all sustain the doctrine enunciated in the decision quoted.

This brings us to the consideration of the second proposition —that if the lower court had no jurisdiction over the person of the defendants or the subject-matter of the action, as alleged, its judgment was absolutely void, and the proper procedure by the plaintiffs in error was by motion in the lower court, rather than by review in this—the appellate—court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 P. 926, 8 Ariz. 195, 1903 Ariz. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclean-v-territory-ariz-1903.