Murray v. Price

172 S.E. 541, 114 W. Va. 425, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 95
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1933
Docket7741
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 172 S.E. 541 (Murray v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Price, 172 S.E. 541, 114 W. Va. 425, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 95 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

Maxwell, PRESIDENT:

Virginia Howard (now Murray) instituted this suit in equity against the executors of, and the beneficiaries under, the will of David C. Howard, deceased, for the purpose of subjecting the decedent’s estate to the payment of a contractual indebtedness. Prom a decree, sustaining demurrers to, and dismissing, plaintiff’s original and amended bills, plaintiff obtained an appeal. Subsequently, defendants, by motion to dismiss the appeal, challenged the jurisdiction of this Court on the ground that the decree of the chancellor was not ap-pealable. Logically, the question of jurisdiction must be considered first.

The scope of appellate jurisdiction of this Court emanates from the Constitution (West Virginia) Article VIII, Section 3, and Code 1931, 58-5-1, and specifically, in the instant cause, from that portion of subsection (g) of said section 1 which authorizes appeal “In any case in chancery wherein there is a *427 decree or order * * * adjudicating the principles of the cause. ” In Blackshere v. Blackshere, 111 W. Va. 213, 215, 161 S. E. 27, 28, is this statement: “Finality of decree, in the sense that all issues must be decided, is required before an appeal can be obtained .in those instances which involve that portion of sub-section 7, which allows an appeal to any decree or order ‘adjudicating the principles of the cause’.” It is a general proposition that appellate jurisdiction begins only where the trial tribunal’s jurisdiction ends. Shirey v. Musgrave, 29 W. Va. 131, 143, 11 S. E. 914.

The trial chancellor, in sustaining the demurrers, was of opinion that the plaintiff had shown “no grounds of equity jurisdiction”, and so dismissed the bills, “without prejudice to the right of the plaintiff hereafter to have this cause transferred to the law side of this court, as provided by Section 11, Art. 4, Ch. 56 of the Code of West Virginia, for procedure therein as a law action, upon amended pleadings, as in said statute provided, in the ease and event of an afSrmanee of this decree of dismissal on appeal therefrom, or the election of the plaintiff not to appeal.therefrom or her inability to obtain such appeal.” It is argued that plaintiff’s right to have the cause transferred to the law side of the court as provided by Code, 56-4-11, renders the decree non-appealable. The pertinent portion of that statute reads:

“No case shall be dismissed simply because it was brought on the wrong side of the court, but whenever it shall appear that a plaintiff has proceeded at law when he should have proceeded in equity, or in equity when he should have proceded, at law, the court shall direct a transfer to the proper forum, and shall order such change in, or amendment of, the pleadings as may be necessary to conform them to the proper practice; and, without such direction, any party to the suit shall have the right, at any stage of the cause, to amend his pleadings so as to obviate the objection that his suit or action was not brought on the right side of the court. ’ ’

Our statute was copied from the Virginia statute (Va. Code, 1919, sec. 6084). The question considered herein was first decided in Virginia in Hodges v. Thornton, 138 Va. 112, 120 *428 S. E. 865, 868 (1924), wherein the court, in determining whether a decree which transferred a cause to the law side of the court was appealable, stated: “We think that it was a final decree, in that it denied the whole of the relief prayed in the bill and in effect dismissed the bill and remanded the plaintiffs to another forum, namely, the law side of the court. But if it was not a final decree, it certainly adjudicated the principles involved, and hence was an appealable decree.” In Colvin v. Butler, (Va.) 143 S. E. 333, 334, decided in 1928, a suit was transferred to the law side, where, upon proper pleadings, the action went to trial before a jury; but, after examination of the plaintiff, the court of its own motion transferred the case back to the chancery side, to which action the defendants objected on the ground that upon re-transfer of the litigation from the law side to the chancery docket, it “was met with a finding to the effect that equity had no jurisdiction, which finding was final and amounted to an adjudication of that proposition.” The appellate court, discussing the quoted portion of the Hodges-Thornton case, stated (at page 334) : “If this be construed to definitely state that the order first transferring the cause was technically speaking a final decree, then that statement was dictum, and not necessary in any decision of the matter then in judgment. All that the court had to decide was that the decree under review was an appealable decree, and it is in fact manifest that the court did not desire to commit itself definitely further.” The court continued: “We should, of course, in dealing with a statute, follow its purpose whenever it is possible to do so, and it is likewise manifest that it would here be in the interest of justice to give to it a liberal, and not a technical, construction. This can readily be done by dealing with this entire record as part and parcel of one transaction. If we treat the decree as appealable and not final,- then it may still be brought under review. Such error as was committed when the cause was transferred from equity to law was corrected when it was transferred back from law to equity. This we hold is reasonable. It does no violence to the language of the statute, and it does what should be done whenever it is possible to do it. It gives to the plaintiff one fair trial, something to which he is entitled *429 in good conscience and under the statute. If this he not true, then a statute designed as a buckler becomes a sword.”

The reason for the adoption of the Virginia statute as explained by Judge Martin P. Burks, one of the Code (1919) Revisors, was to “give the advocates of code procedure full opportunity to develop the merits of the system, and if they proved more satisfactory than the present system the transition would be much easier than by a complete substitution of one for the other at the present time.” 5 Va. Law Reg. (N. S.) 97, 120. The language of the statute itself mirrors the legislative intent to adhere to the prevailing distinction between courts of equity and courts of law. Hence, consideration of cases based on code practice is unnecessary.

In the cause at bar, there has been no transfer. . The decree merely reserves to plaintiff her statutory procedural right upon the happening of-any of the following events: (1) inability to obtain an appeal, (2) affirmance of the decree on appeal, or (3) election not to appeal. But, the dismissal of the bills stands determinate and conclusive. It adjudicates the principles of the cause in so far as jurisdiction is concerned. There is pronouncement of no equity. To compel the plaintiff to have her rights determined in a court of law before ascertaining whether the chancellor erred in denying equity jurisdiction not only would ■ work hardship upon her, but would tend, in many instances, to occasion and to prolong useless litigation, and would defeat the manifest purpose of the statute. We are of opinion that the decree complained of adjudicates the principles of the cause within the meaning of the statute and is appealable.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.E. 541, 114 W. Va. 425, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-price-wva-1933.