Powhatan Coal & Coke Co. v. Ritz

56 S.E. 257, 60 W. Va. 395, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 52
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 56 S.E. 257 (Powhatan Coal & Coke Co. v. Ritz) 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
Powhatan Coal & Coke Co. v. Ritz, 56 S.E. 257, 60 W. Va. 395, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 52 (W. Va. 1906).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, Judge:

On the 11th day of August, 1906, the Powhatan Coal and Coke Company, a corporation, obtained from a Judge of this Court a rule in prohibition, requiring the judge of the circuit court of McDowell counts'- and the Pocahontas Coke Company,, a corporation, to appear on the first day of the next term of this Court, thereafter to be held at Charles Town, in Jefferson county, and show cause, if any they, or either of them, could, why a writ of prohibition should not be awarded, prohibiting the said judge from proceeding against the said Powhatan Coal and Coke Company upon a rule awarded by him, on the 31st day of July, 1906, requiring said petitioner to appear before him on the 4th day of August, 1906, and show cause, if any it could, why it should not be fined and otherwise punished for its contempt, in violating and disregarding an injunction awarded by said judge on the second day of July, 1906. At said term of this Court, both respondents appeared by their attorneys and filed their joint demurrer to-the petition and moved to quash the rule,-and the matters of law arising thereon were argued and submitted to the Court-

Petitioner, admitting its disobedience of the injunction, relies, for. its protection and justification in so doing, upon want of jurisdiction and power in the judge to award the injunction. It also denied jurisdiction, power and authority in said judge to proceed against it, as for a contempt, because, prior to the awarding of the rule, a motion to dissolve the injunction had been made and overruled and an appeal from the-order overruling the motion, together with a supersedeas, had been obtained, and perfected, whereby the petitioner insists, that the injunction and all the proceedings relating thereto-were transferred into this Court, and passed out of the jurisdiction of said circuit judge and his court. It is further con[398]*398tended that the judge in vacation cannot punish for a contempt of this kind.

A statement of the terms of the injunction order, the purport of the bill upon which it was awarded, and some of the proceedings attending the awarding thereof, is necessary to a clear understanding of the ground upon which the petitioner attempts to justify its action in disobeying the order. The Powhatan Coal and Coke Company is engaged in the operation of coal mines and manufacture of coke. It, together with some nineteen other corporations, engaged in the same business, procured the organization of another corporation known as the Pocahontas Coke Company, whose business is the sale of coke manufactured by said twenty companies. The relations of the selling company to each of the others are created and defined by a written contract, the terms of which it is unnecessary to set out in detail. By these contracts, it is made the common agent of the other corporations, for a period of three years, for the purpose of effecting sales of the coke produced by them. After it had acted as such agent for a considerable length of time, the Powhatan Coal and Coke Company, and some others, sustaining the same relation to the agent, became dissatisfied, revoked, or attempted to revoke, the powers of their common agent, refused to make further deliveries to it, and began to dispose of their coke in the market, either through other agencies or by direct sales to customers. Thereupon the Pocahontas Coke Company presented its bills against said companies to said judge in vacation and obtained from him an order of injunction on each of them. The order made on the bill against the Powhatan Coal and Coke Company restrained, inhibited and enjoined it until otherwise ordered from selling, through any agent or agencies, other than the complainant, or in any other way, any of the coke covered by the terms of the contract, which the said complainant had theretofore sold or might thereafter sell before the expiration of said contract in accordance with the terms thereof; and also from refusing to carry out said contract by withdrawing the coke from the complainant as its selling agent; and required the defendant to continue to ship its coke to the order of the complainant as its sole selling agent under said contract. On the 16th day of July, the Powhatan Company moved the [399]*399judge in vacation to dissolve the injunction, which he refused to do.

It is hardly necessary to state that want of jurisdiction, in some respect, on the part of the court, judge or tribunal against whom a writ of prohibition is asked is the only ground upon which it can ordinarily be obtained. As to what constitutes a want of jurisdiction, courts, judges and lawyers sometimes differ, and there may be some conflict among the decisions, but all agree that it should never be used except to prevent acts which are not within the jurisdiction of the court, officer or tribunal, sought to be restrained. There may be an entire want of jurisdiction, or the judge against whom the writ goes may have jurisdiction of the subject matter of the controversy and of all the parties interested; and yet render a judgment, or make an order in the cause, in excess of his powers. In both cases there is a want of jurisdiction. The difference between the two cases is in respect to form and degree, rather than principle. As regards the cause of action and parties, there may be a total want of jurisdiction and power over both, or over only one. In such cases it is said the proceeding is without jurisdiction. There may be jurisdiction over the subject matter and all the parties, and still a want of power in the court to render a certain judgment, and, if this judgment is rendered, the judge is sometimes said to have abused his jurisdiction or acted in excess of it. Still it is an attempt -to act without power, and a lack of power is a lack of jurisdiction.

Want of power to award the injunction is predicated, first, on the failure to give notice of the application for, and granting of, the injunction; and, second, on the requirement that the defendant continue to deliver to the plaintiff its coke.

There is a discretion in courts of equity to award injunctions without notice to the defendant. Daniel’s Chy. Pr. 1665; Spelling Inj. 1074; Beach Inj. section 125; High Inj. section 1579; Buckley v. Corse, 1 N. J. Eq. 504; Thomas Iron Co., v. Mining Co., 38 N. J. Eq. 77. It is very common practice to grant preliminary injunctions without notice in this State, and in vacation as well as in term. The exercise of the power given to judges to issue injunctions in vacation, is governed by the rules that control the performance of the same function in term. Notice of the application may [400]*400be dispensed with in either case. In view of the discretionary power to decide whether the circumstances in any case render it proper to dispense with notice, an improper decision of that question could not amount to more than a mere judicial error. There is authority to- consider — to hear and determine — in every such case, and that is the very essence of jurisdiction. Section 2 of chapter 133 of the Code expressly leaves the question of the propriety of giving notice of the application in the discretion of the court or judge to whom the application is made.

As to the other ground, namely, the requirement that the defendant continue to deliver its coke to the plaintiff, much of the argument deals with the power of the court generally to issue, preliminarily, mandatory injunctions, rather than with the substance of the thing done in that form. That courts of equity have the power to issue mandatory injunctions before final hearing is asserted by practically all the courts. This Court, in Boyd v.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.E. 257, 60 W. Va. 395, 1906 W. Va. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powhatan-coal-coke-co-v-ritz-wva-1906.