Silliman v. Whitmer

34 A. 56, 173 Pa. 401, 1896 Pa. LEXIS 718
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 27, 1896
DocketNo. 83
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 A. 56 (Silliman v. Whitmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silliman v. Whitmer, 34 A. 56, 173 Pa. 401, 1896 Pa. LEXIS 718 (Pa. 1896).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Dean,

The defendants claimed property in and the right to remove an iron tram railway about seven miles in length, constructed for the purpose of removing the timber on a large tract of land in Union county; plaintiffs denied this right, hence a suit in equity, in which the court below, by preliminary injunction, temporarily restrained defendants. After hearing testimony, on November 6,1895, in opinion filed, the court dissolved the injunction; from this decree plaintiffs appealed to this court, filing bond with approved surety in sum of $10,000, and followed this on November 18, by application in vacation to [404]*404Justice Mitchell of this court for an order of supersedeas pending the appeal; on this application same day he indorsed this order: —“ Rule granted to show cause why special supersedeas should not be granted, returnable to Monday, January 6th, 1896, all proceedings and operations on the ground to stay meanwhile.”

It will be noticed, no additional bond was required preliminary to the order; but this was wholly within the discretion of the Justice awarding the rule. He simply directed the situation of the parties as it existed before the dissolution of the preliminary injunction should be maintained forty-nine days longer. As such short delay, under the uncontested facts, could not result in appreciable damage to defendants, and as the bond already filed was amply sufficient, there was no reason for exacting additional security. And the rule having been awarded in vacation, it was made returnable before this court the earliest day possible, that is, the first day of the term. On the same day it was awarded, copies of the rule and order of supersedeas were served on William Whitmer, senior partner of Whitmer & Sons, defendants. He resided in Philadelphia, and, so far as appears, had no connection with the operations of the partnership on the grounds in Union county; he was an active member of the partnership, however, in other localities. On the 19th of November, the day following the granting of the rule, a copy was handed to Andrew A. Leiser, Esq., attorney for defendants, at his office at Lewisburg. Charles Steele, a member of the partnership, resided at Sunbury, where was the partnership office; he was in charge of the work on the ground, employed the men and directed their operations, and on him the preliminary injunction issued by the court below, and after-wards dissolved, had been served. From some wholly unexplained neglect, no service of the order of supersedeas was made upon him or on those he employed. He, and the employees of his firm, continued taking up and removing the tram railway, after the order was served on William Whitmer, and in a few days the work was completed.

As touching the rule to show cause why there should not be a supersedeas pending the appeal, such an order has now nothing to operate on; the railway has been removed, and an order to restore it can be as effective on final decree as if made now, [405]*405if at that time the merits of the cause should be adjudged with plaintiffs. Therefore, we suspend decree on this rule until final hearing of the appeal.

On the first day of this term, the return day of the rule, on statement of facts as to disregard by defendants of the temporary order for stay of proceedings until the sitting of the court, .a rule to show cause why an attachment, as if for contempt, should not issue against defendants was awarded, returnable Saturday, 18th of January, 1896.

As already noticed, the order to cease operations was served only on William Whitmer, residing in Philadelphia, and on Mr. Leiser, counsel for the defendants, in Union county. As to Mr. Leiser, he being in no sense a party to the proceedings, the order was not directed to him, and except as a matter of courtesy towards him, as opposing counsel, we see no reason why it should have been served upon him. He is a highly respectable member of the bar, and states distinctly, under oath, that he gave no notice of the order to his clients, because he assumed it had been served personally (as, in our opinion, it ought to have been) on Mr. Steele, the partner in charge of the work, and on whom had been served all the papers in the preceding litigation. This was an altogether warranted assumption by a lawyer; he had no reason to suppose his adversaries would not also procure service on the partner in active charge of the work, who was well known to them, and on whom previous service of the injunction was had. He was justified in presuming, if they wanted the work promptly and effectively stopped, the man who was carrying it on would at once he served with the order to stop it.

As to William Whitmer, who was served the same day the order was issued, although there are some mitigating circumstances, he is guilty of more than a mere technical contempt; he showed a reckless indifference to the command of a peremptory order directed to and served on him. True, he was in Philadelphia, and the subject of the litigation was in Union county; but he was a leading member of the firm which was asserting a right to tear up the road, and which he knew was at that time engaged in that very work. As a partner, it was within the scope of his authority to at once transmit an order to those in charge to stop work. He says, he told the officer [406]*406who served the order, that the case was in the hands of his attorney; he then states further, that personally, he had nothing to do with the removal of these rails, or with operations on the ground, the whole matter being in charge of his partner, Steele, and he wholly disclaims any intention to disregard the order. Taking these statements as true, and we have no reason to disbelieve them, they show such an indifference to the plain order of the court, and Iris own duty connected therewith, as to almost equal flagrant intentional violation of law. There is no evidence that he even attempted to communicate with Steele, his active partner on the ground, or with his counsel at Lewis-burg ; he, one of defendants, having, by law, the duty to obey and the right to command his copartners to respect the order, neither utters a word nor performs a single act significant of a desire to secure obedience to a writ issued in a suit of which William Whitmer & Sons are parties defendant. In fact, he did not perform his duty as a suitor or a citizen. He doubtless hopes for a favorable decree on the merits of his cause, and expects the courts to enforce, with the whole power of the commonwealth, that decree, yet an interlocutory temporary order in favor of the adverse party he treats as not worth noticing by telegram or letter to his partner. Taking into view every circumstance which tends to exculpate, his own statement under oath to a great degree inculpates him; therefore, as to him, the rule is made absolute.

One other matter calls for notice in connection with this decree. One of the reputable counsel for respondents to this rule has orally argued before the court, and gravely attempted to maintain this proposition in the printed paper-book: (1) That the order of Justice Mitchell of the 18th of November, 1895, was irregular, because previous thereto no special bond had been filed, and therefore (2) no attachment ought to issue for disobedience of it. Or, more concisely, if a party to whom a writ is directed questions its regularity, he can disobey it with impunity.

To sustain this sort of anarchy as law, the case of The Commonwealth v. The Judges, 102 Pa. 228, is cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 A. 56, 173 Pa. 401, 1896 Pa. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silliman-v-whitmer-pa-1896.