Phillips v. Welch

12 Nev. 158
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1877
DocketNo. 806
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 12 Nev. 158 (Phillips v. Welch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Welch, 12 Nev. 158 (Neb. 1877).

Opinions

[164]*164By the Court,

Hawley, C. J.:

E. D. Sweeney, one of the defendants in the above-entitled action, upon the same transcript and evidence that was presented in this case on appeal, (11 Nev. 187,) claims that the district court in adjudging him guilty of contempt “exceeded its jurisdiction, and that the decision of said court in said proceeding was contrary to and against the evidence adduced before said court, and contrary to and against law;” and that, by reason of said court adjudging him guilty of contempt, he has been greatly injured in his property and otherwise, and asks this court, upon a review of the case upon certiorari, to set aside the proceedings and declare the order adjudging him guilty of contempt to be null and void.

It is argued by petitioner’s counsel that the affidavit of the plaintiff Phillips, upon which the contempt proceeding is founded, does not state facts sufficient to give tlio court jurisdiction of the subject matter; that said affidavit abounds in legal conclusions without the statement of any fact upon which the conclusions are based.

1. Does the affidavit state any substantive fact sufficient to set the power of the court in motion? This is the material question that we are called upon to decide. If it does not, then the proceedings must be annulled. If it does, the judgment must stand.

The statute applicable to this case, provides that: “When the contempt is not committed in the immediate view and presence of the court, or judge at chambers, an affidavit shall be presented to the court or judge of the facts constituting the contempt.” * * * (1 Comp. L. 1522.)

Under a statute identical with these provisions, the supreme court of California, in Batchelder v. Moore, say: “The power of a court to punish for an alleged contempt of its authority, though undoubted, is in its nature arbitrary, and its exercise is not to be upheld, except under the circumstances and in the manner prescribed by law. It is essential to the validity of proceedings in contempt, subjecting a party to fine and imprisonment, that they show a case in point of jurisdiction within the provisions of the law by which [165]*165such proceedings are authorized, for mere presumptions and intendments are not to be indulged in their support. The statute of this state regulating contempts and their punishments provides that when the alleged contempt is not committed in the presence of the court an affidavit of the facts constituting the contempt shall be presented. * * * If there be no affidavit presented there is nothing to set the power of the court in motion; and if the affidavit, as presented, be one which, upon its face, fails to state the substantive facts which in point of law do, or might, constitute a contempt on the part of the accused, the same result must follow, for there is no distinction in such a case between the utter absence of an affidavit and the presentation of one which is defective in substance in stating the facts constituting the alleged contempt.” (42 Cal. 414.)

The affidavit in this case charges but one offense. It sets out in detail the fact of the commencement of the suit of Phillips v. Welch et al,, and the proceedings had therein. The complaint and answer in said suit are referred to aud made a part of the affidavit. The decree rendered in said suit is copied into the affidavit. Affiant then, among other things, states: “That said decision aud decree was rendered in open court, and the several parties and their attorneys had actual knowledge thereof, and the same was served in due form on the several parties defendant on the day of November, 1872, aud the third day of December, A. D. 1872; that said decision and decree has never been appealed from, stayed, modified or reversed, but ever since the rendition thereof has been and now is in full force, virtue and effect;” that ever since said decision was rendered, affiant has been, and now is, the owner of the land described in the complaint and mentioned in the decree, and of the water, water-right, usufruct and privilege specified therein; that during the present season' affiant has been engaged in the cultivation of his said land, and in growing crops of grain, vegetables and grass, and raising stock thereon, and' needs and requires the use of the water awarded to him in said decree, and the whole thereof, to irrigate said land and the crops growing thereon, and for [166]*166watering his stock and for domestic purposes; “that the said defendant, E. D. Sweeney, on the first day of July, A. D. 1875, * * and on divers and sundry other days between the first and the twenty-eighth days of July, A.D. 1875, did, in disobedience and resistance of a lawful writ and order of said district court, to-wit: the decree and injunction aforesaid made and entered in said cause, and in willful violation and disregard of said writ, order and decree, and in willful contempt of the said court and its said lawful writ, order and decree, unlawfully and intentionally violate and disobey said writ, order and decree, and unlawfully and intentionally diverted the waters of said stream in violation of said decree, and contrary to the terms and provisions thereof, and in violation of and contrary to the injunction therein contained ;” “ that at the several dates aforesaid, said defendant, E. D. Sweeney, did unlawfully and intentionally divert the waters of said stream in quantities largely in excess of the quantities authorized or permitted by the decree, and for uses and purposes not authorized but forbidden by the decree;” that at the several dates aforesaid affiant needed and required all the water awarded to him by said decree in connection with his said land, to wit, thirty-one one-hundredth parts thereof, to irrigate said land and the crops growing thereon, and that he was deprived thereof by said excessive and unlawful diversion and use by said defendant, E. D. Sweeny, and that by such deprivation affiant was injured in his right and land, and that his crops greatly suffered and were actually damaged.

It is claimed by counsel for petitioner that the quantity of water to which he was entitled is clearly a question of law, and that the affidavit should contain a statement of the exact quantity of water that he was actually diverting, so that the court, from such statement, could have determined whether he was violating the decree or order, and especially is it contended that this fact should have been stated in the affidavit, because it appears from other averments therein that Sweeney has acquired the title of defendant Quill to the lands mentioned in the decree since the rendition thereof. Ordinarily, this would be the best mode of stating the facts. [167]*167But the decree rendered in the suit of Phillips v. Welch et al. is in many respects a peculiar one. It states the exact fractional part of the water in King’s canon to which each of the parties to the suit is entitled.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Nev. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-welch-nev-1877.