Nielson v. Schiller, Judge

66 P.2d 365, 92 Utah 137, 1937 Utah LEXIS 85
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1937
DocketNo. 5846.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 P.2d 365 (Nielson v. Schiller, Judge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nielson v. Schiller, Judge, 66 P.2d 365, 92 Utah 137, 1937 Utah LEXIS 85 (Utah 1937).

Opinions

MOFFAT, Justice.

Certiorari to determine whether or not the district court of this state may enjoin a party litigant from prosecuting-an action theretofore filed in another district court of the. state when all the issues raised in the second action are the same and the parties are the same as in the first action. In substance, the question is as stated by plaintiff O. G. Niel-son, applicant for the writ in this court.

Other and divers questions are raised and argued as to matters of failure of the court to rule upon motions, demurrers, and objections to proceedings in the district court of the Third judicial district, in and for Salt Lake county. As; will appear, we think the issue is properly limited to the-matter as above stated.

From the allegations of the complaint of plaintiff in the district court of Salt Lake county, it appears that defendant in that case, plaintiff in the Sevier county case, began

“an action against the plaintiff upon said writings copied as Exhibits ‘A,’ ‘B,’ ‘C,’ and ‘D’ in the District Court for Sevier County, Utah, demanding judgment for the sum of more than $4,000.00 thereon, and a decree of foreclosure of plaintiff’s said property as described in said exhibit D, claiming to own said exhibits B and C and D by assignment over from the payees therein. And defendant threatens to and will, unless restrained, proceed therein to decree and sale thereunder. Plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law. It might, but need not, file an equitable counter-claim for relief in said action, and is entitled to assert its remedies as herein by a separate action to enjoin the defendant under section 44-0-9 of Utah Rev. St. 1933 aforesaid.”

The record discloses that an order to show cause was issued upon the complaint and served upon defendant Nielson. *140 whereby he was temporarily restrained and further ordered to show cause why the restraining orders should not be continued in effect until the trial of the cause pending in Salt Lake county. It is disclosed by the record thaif in response to the order to show cause, the defendant in the Salt Lake county action made return to the court and called the court’s attention to the prior pending action in Sevier county, the identity of the parties and issues, and submitted the matter to the court upon the statement made. It then appears that the court made and entered an order whereby the

“defendant is temporarily restrained from proceeding with his action in the District Court of Sevier County * * * until the trial of this action upon its merits.”

Aside from the subsidiary questions, not necessary to be noticed, appears the defendant here, plaintiff in the Salt Lake county case, contended in that court and relied lied upon section 44-0-9, R. S. Utah 1933, for authority to lodge the action enjoining the plaintiff in the Sevier county case from proceeding, which in effect enjoins the district court of Sevier county from further proceeding. Section 44-0-9, R. S. 1933, reads:

““Whenever it shall satisfactorily appear that any bond, bill, note, assurance, pledge, conveyance, mortgage, deed of trust, contract, security or other evidence of debt has been taken or received in violation of the provisions of this title, the court shall declare the same to be void, and enjoin any prosecution thereon, and shall order the same to be surrendered and canceled, and any property, real or personal, embraced within the terms of such contracts, and all securities, to be delivered up, if in possession of the defendant in the action; or, if the same are in the possession of the plaintiff, provision shall be made in the judgment or decree in the action removing the cloud of such usurious contracts or securities from the title to such property.”

We are of the opinion the section quoted is not subject to the construction contended for by defendant, nor may it be used as the basis for having another court of concurrent jurisdiction enjoin and pass upon an issue pending in such *141 other court involving the question as to whether or not the contract sued upon is usurious. Such an issue is subject to be raised in the cause in the court where the action relating to the enforcement of such contract is pending.

We are of opinion the Legislature intended 'by the section to prevent the enforcement of a usurious contract and to require cancellation and surrender of a usurious obligation whenever it should satisfactorily appear to the court whose powers were invoked in an attempt to enforce such obligation, that it was usurious. To say when an action is pending in one court that one of the parties to the action may claim the contract involved in the action is usurious and go into another court of concurrent jurisdiction to have that matter determined and then either leave the court first having jurisdiction to await the determination of such issue and leave the first court without a cause to try or to find itself hampered by a decision that may or may not accord with the issue as determined by the court first' assuming jurisdiction of the cause, is abhorrent to the orderly procedure and determination of causes in courts of concurrent jurisdiction and cannot do other than inject confusion into the orderly procedure of the courts.

A writ of certiorari may be granted when an officer or other tribunal exercising judicial functions has exceeded the jurisdiction of such tribunal and there is no appeal, or in the judgment of the court or judge to which the application for the writ has been made there is no plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.

It is argued the district court of Salt Lake county has jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties and, hence, a motion to quash and vacate the writ issued out of this court has been made. The motion to quash and vacate the writ is denied.

The question of jurisdiction was discussed in the case of Atwood v. Cox, 88 Utah 437, 55 P. (2d) 377. Where the law *142 gives to a court or tribunal power to entertain a cause and by proper and sufficient pleadings stating facts invoking that jurisdiction, one of the incidents to the invoking of jurisdiction is the power to proceed to hear and determine the cause. May it be said that when one court has by proper pleadings and process had its jurisdiction invoked, that another court or tribunal or court of concurrent and equal but no greater jurisdiction may by process stay, revoke, annul, or interfere with the orderly procedure of the first tribunal by enjoining the parties or any of them from having the remedies invoked administered without denial or unnecessary delay or be barred from prosecuting or defending in the action to which he is a party and in the forum having jurisdiction properly invoked? We think not. To say that one court of concurrent jurisdiction may stay the proceedings of parties before another tribunal is equivalent to saying that the second tribunal may destroy or control the jurisdiction of the first. It amounts to a destruction of jurisdiction already properly invoked.

District courts are courts of original jurisdiction, having jurisdiction in all matters, civil and criminal, not excepted by the Constitution and not prohibited by law.

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Bluebook (online)
66 P.2d 365, 92 Utah 137, 1937 Utah LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nielson-v-schiller-judge-utah-1937.