Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Jurgenson

141 N.W. 70, 25 N.D. 14, 1913 N.D. LEXIS 97
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 N.W. 70 (Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Jurgenson) 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
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Jurgenson, 141 N.W. 70, 25 N.D. 14, 1913 N.D. LEXIS 97 (N.D. 1913).

Opinion

Spalding, Oh. J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the district •court of Richland county, awarding plaintiff costs on a motion for an ■order to show cause and from the court’s order sustaining plaintiff’s pbjeetions made and filed with the court on the return of such order to show cause. It appears that a purported judgment was obtained by the defendant Genaro in a police magistrate’s court in Richland ■county against the plaintiff herein, on default; that on the 8th day of November, 1911, Honorable Frank P. Allen, judge of the district court of Richland county, granted plaintiff herein an order to show ■cause, returnable before him on the 27th day of November, 1911, why a writ should not be issued restraining, enjoining, and prohibiting defendants, and each of them, from proceeding further upon the execution issued in the action of Genaro v. Northern Pacific Railroad Company, ■and why such execution should not be held void, and the parties named ■restrained, enjoined, and prohibited from in any manner further levying upon or seizing or selling the property of said company under any [18]*18claim of any judgment or purported judgment rendered in said action. The order to show cause was based upon an affidavit of counsel, setting forth facts which it is unnecessary to relate here, further than that it alleged that no judgment had ever been rendered or entered against the railroad company in said action in said court, and that the execution issued or attempted to be issued on a pretended judgment was void and invalid as wholly unauthorized and without and in excess of the jurisdiction of the police magistrate; and that any levy or attempted levy thereunder was wholly void and without and in excess of the jurisdiction of the defendants and each of them, because no judgment had been rendered or entered in said court and in such action. On the return day counsel for Genaro, plaintiff in the police court, filed objections to the jurisdiction of the court, on the ground that the writ and order to show cause issued did not run in the name of the state of North Dakota or under its authority, and that the style thereof was not “the State of North Dakota,” as provided by § 97 of the Constitution of the state of North Dakota; and for the further reason that the defendant Genaro, the party beneficially interested, had not in any wise been served with such or any other process or notice in the premises. The court sustained these objections, and the two questions before us for determination are whether it was necessary for the order to show cause to be addressed to an officer in the name of the state of North Dakota, and whether service thereof upon defendant Genaro was necessary to give jurisdiction to the court in the premises.

Respondent argues with much force that the so-called order to show cause was, in law, an alternative writ of prohibition, and that as such writ it was process, and not having run in the style of the state of North Dakota, — that is, not having read, “The state of North Dakota to” the sheriff or some other officer, — it was invalid; and that therefore no valid proceedings could subsequently be had thereon, in the light of the special appearance 'for the respondents and the objection made in their behalf.

An examination of the authorities on this question, and of the principles announced, renders it clear that in this the respondent is mistaken.

We will first give some attention to the provisions of our statute. Section 7836, Rev. Codes 1905, authorizes the issuance of 'the writ of pro[19]*19hibition by the supreme and district courts to an inferior tribunal, etc. Section 7837 requires tbe writ to be alternative or peremptory, and distinguishes between alternative and peremptory writs. Section 7838 makes certain provisions of tbe procedure on mandamus applicable, and among such provisions we find § 7825, wbicb reads: “When tbe application to tbe court is made without notice to tbe adverse party, and tbe writ is allowed, tbe alternative writ must be first issued; but if tbe application is upon due notice, and. tbe writ is allowed, the peremptory writ may be issued in tbe first instance. Tbe notice of tbe application when given must be at least ten days. . . .”

Writs are issued by tbe court through tbe clerk. Orders to show cause, under our practice, are signed by tbe judge. This order was signed by tbe judge. Tbe practice in this state has long been established, and justifies tbe initiation of tbe proceeding through an order to show cause of tbe character of tbe one here involved. Such orders to show cause have been issued repeatedly by this court in various special proceedings, and have, so far as we are aware, never run in tbe name or style of tbe state of North Dakota. When writs have been issued they have been issued by tbe clerk upon tbe order of tbe court, but orders to show cause have invariably been signed by a member of tbe court. It is true tbe order to show cause often contains some of tbe same provisions found in an alternative writ, but ordinarily an order to show cause is only another name for a notice and another method of submitting a motion; and § 7825, supra, clearly contemplates tbe application being made upon notice when a peremptory writ is sought in tbe first instance. Such notice may be given by means of tbe simple notice signed by counsel, or through tbe agency of an order to show cause, issued by tbe court or a judge. This is a combined notice and motion. Tbe works on tbe subject all seem to contemplate application for tbe writ, either by notiee or by order to show cause, and none of tbe approved forms of an order to show caiise that we find contain tbe greeting wbicb respondent contends is essential to jurisdiction. See tbe title, Writ of Prohibition, 14 Enc. Eorms, 987; Writ of Mandamus, 13 Enc. Eorms, 767; 13 Enc. PI. & Pr. 767.

Respondents’ counsel seems to have, himself, treated this as an order to show cause, rather than as a writ; for we find in tbe record that, prior to tbe granting of tbe order to show cause under consideration, [20]*20another similar order of the same court had been granted, and on the return day respondents’ counsel appeared and objected to the jurisdiction of the court, because ten days’ notice had not been given as required by § 7825, supra. In addition to the difference between an order to show cause and an alternative writ, which we have mentioned, the authorities make a further distinction, and, if applicable in this jurisdiction, — and we think it is, — it clearly brings the order in the case at bar under the designation of an order to show cause, rather than of a writ. It is held in such authorities that the difference in practice be-ween a rule to show cause why a peremptory writ should not issue and an alternative writ is that, in case of a rule to show cause, the questions arising upon the application are brought before the court and discussed upon affidavits, while in the case of the alternative writ they come before the court upon the writ itself, which sets forth the facts upon which the application is founded, and upon the defendant’s return thereto. See People ex rel. Wiswall v. Judges, 3 How. Pr. 164, and authorities cited. Further distinctions are found which it is unnecessary to here consider; but if the rule announced is applicable here, as we believe it is, it is clear that we have not an alternative writ, but an order to show cause simply. The order did not recite nor cover the grounds of the application. They were contained in an affidavit. We are of the opinion that the district court improperly sustained the first objection.

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.W. 70, 25 N.D. 14, 1913 N.D. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-pacific-railway-co-v-jurgenson-nd-1913.