Merchants National Bank v. Braithwaite

75 N.W. 244, 7 N.D. 358, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 62
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 75 N.W. 244 (Merchants National Bank v. Braithwaite) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants National Bank v. Braithwaite, 75 N.W. 244, 7 N.D. 358, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 62 (N.D. 1898).

Opinion

Corliss, C. J.

This appeal is from two orders. One is an order denying defendant’s motion to set aside certain orders in proceedings supplementaiy to execution, and granting to the plaintiff certain relief, not necessary to be now specified. The other order required defendant to deposit in court a sum of money as a condition of vacating a restraining order issued in such proceedings. The sweeping assertion is made by counsel for defendant that the proceedings and all orders therein are void for want of jurisdiction in the judge by whose order such proceedings were instituted and by whom the different orders therein have been made. The judgment on which such proceedings were based was recovered in the District Court of the Territory of Dakota in 1886, three years before statehood. The statute authorizing supplementary proceedings, which was then in force, was section 5174 of the Compiled Laws. This section declared that the order to examine the judgment debtor might be issued by the Judge of the District Court, and that all subsequent orders-must be made by the same judge. The language of the statute is that the judge of the court having power to issue execution on the judgment, and out of which the execution was in fact issued, shall possess the power to make the order for the examination of the debtor and all subsequent orders. It is obvious that, as these proceedings are purely statutory in character, no other judge has any jurisdiction in the matter, because no other judge is named in the statute. It is urged that as the judgment is a judgment of a territorial court, and as that court has ceased to exist, no state court has any power to issue .process to enforce such judgment [364]*364by execution. Hence it is insisted that the execution, which was in fact issued by the state court in 1890, is void, and that the proceedings based thereon must necessarily fall to the ground for want of foundation. Moreover, it is claimed that, as the state court was riot the court which could issue execution on the judgment, the judge thereof is not the judge who is authorized by § 5174, Comp. Laws, (which was continued in force by the state constitution,) to grant the order made in this case to examine the judgment debtor in supplementary proceedings. We cannot agree with counsel for plaintiff in this contention. The question is one of jurisdiction after statehood over the records and judgments obtained in actions brought in a territorial court. The jurisdiction which formerly was vested in the territorial court over such records and judgments, congress must have intended to be transferred to some other tribunal. We cannot believe that it was the purpose of that body to take from a great mass of judgments in the various courts of the different territories mentioned in the enabling act all force save that of a conclusive adjudication, and compel the plaintiffs therein to go through the formality of bringing suit upon them in the courts of the different states to be admitted into the Union, the same as upon a foreign judgment or the judgment of a sister state. The old courts having jurisdiction over cases in which judgments had been ordered were to be swept away. New courts were to take their place possessing similar jurisdiction. Those judgments were judgments rendered within the same territory to be embraced within the new states. Why, under such circumstances, congress should withhold its consent that the judgments should become the judgments of the state courts which should succeed to the same general jurisdiction as that of the territorial tribunals in which such judgments were rendered is inexplicable. That it did not withhold such consent is clear; and, even if we were in doubt on the point, our duty would be plain. It has been settled by an authority to which we must defer. In Glaspell v. Railroad Co., 144 U. S. 211, 12 Sup. Ct. 593, the Federal Supreme Court held [365]*365that as to an action not pending at the time of the admission of North Dakota into the Union, but in which a judgment had been rendered in the Territorial District Court, there was no jurisdiction whatever in the Federal Court, but that exclusive jurisdiction of such a case was vested in the State Distinct Court, which was the successor of such territorial court. The case was remanded to the State District Court, the Federal Supreme Court holding that jurisdiction over the judgment in that action rendered by the Territorial District Court had been by the enabling act transferred to the state court. The action in which the judgment was rendered on which are founded the. supplementary proceedings, the validity of which are controverted, was not a pending action, within the meaning either of our statute or of the enabling act. The time to appeal therefrom had expired when the state was admitted, and, even if it had not yet expired, still the suit was not pending, because no proceedings looking to a new trial were then pending, nor has any step to review the judgment on appeal ever been taken in the case. In construing the enabling act, the court in the Glaspell case said that that act had transferred pending cases in which the United States was a party to the Federal Court, and pending cases over which a Federal Court would have no jurisdiction to the state courts, and that the jurisdiction over all cases which were no longer pending, and over the records and judgments therein, was vested in the state courts, without reference to the question whether such cases must have been brought in a state or a Federal Court, had the territory been a state at the time such actions were commenced. The enabling act, by its express provisions and the implications thereof, divided all actions, so far as the jurisdiction thereof was concerned, into two great classes, — those which were pending and those which were not pending at the time of statehood. It declared that as to pending actions jurisdiction over all actions to which the United States was a party should vest absolutely in the new Federal Courts created in such new states; that as to all suits over which the Federal Courts would have had no jurisdiction had the [366]*366territory been a state at the time they were brought, the jurisdiction thereof should pass to the proper state courts; and that with regard to the middle class of cases, i. e. those in which the state and Federal Courts would have had concurrent jurisdiction had the territory then been a state, either of the- parties to the proceedings might determine whether he would continue the litigation in the state or in the Federal Court. Until the necessary steps should be taken to transfer such cases, the enabling act contemplated that the proper court for them to be carried on in was the state court, and not the Federal Court. It was only after an application for a transfer had been made that the state court was to lose jurisdiction. Until then the jurisdiction over the case was lodged in the state, and not in the Federal Court; and, unless the application for such transfer should be made in time, the jurisdiction of the state court over the case would become absolute. Section 23, Enabling Act; State v. Barnes, 5 N. D. 350, 65 N. W. Rep. 688. Congress declared that, with respect to all pending actions save those belonging to a single class, the jurisdiction thereover should vest in the state courts temporarily at least, and with regard to some of them permanently; and that, even in those cases in which it was in the power of either party to divest the state court of jurisdiction, the state court should retain jurisdiction if neither party should make a timely application for that purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.W. 244, 7 N.D. 358, 1898 N.D. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-national-bank-v-braithwaite-nd-1898.