State Ex Rel. Caron v. Dearing

236 S.W. 629, 291 Mo. 169, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 30, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 629 (State Ex Rel. Caron v. Dearing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Caron v. Dearing, 236 S.W. 629, 291 Mo. 169, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 92 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

This is an original proceeding in prohibition against respondent as judge of the Washington County Circuit Court to prevent the enforcement of a temporary injunction granted by him against relators and ‘Missouri Pacific Railroad Company. On filing and examination of relators’ petition our preliminary rule issued. Respondent has filed return thereto, and relators have filed their motion for judgment on the pleadings, thereby admitting such facts in the return as are well pleaded.

Relators are doing business at Summit, in Washington County, as Summit Live Stock Company, and are engaged in feeding a large number of hogs with garbage shipped to Summit over the Missouri Pacific Railroad from the city of St. Louis under a contract with said city. The average shipments of garbage amount to three hundred tons daily. Relators have a large investment in said hogs. Unless said garbage is promptly removed from said city the health of the inhabitants will be endangered. During the hot months garbage decays and becomes putrid and will spread disease. Relators are under bond to said city to perform their contract. Said garbage consisted of bread, peelings, dead animals, glass, tin cans and other soured and decaying vegetables and animal matter. Said garbage caused offensive and injurious odors at relators’ hog ranch and in the neighborhood thereof, tending to cause disease and pestilence and otherwise injuriously affected the general welfare of the people of the State, especially those living in the neighbor- *174 Iiood of said hog ranch, many of whom own their homes. In other words, under the admitted facts the unloading and feeding of said garbage constitute a public nuisance. Eelators contend and respondent denies that the place where said garbage is received and fed to hogs is in a very sparsely settled district and at a place where same is not harmful to any person and does not injure any of the inhabitants of Washington County. The fact, admitted by relators’ motion for judgment, is that “many families consisting of men, women and children live and own their homes ’ ’ in the vicinity of said hog ranch.

Respondent is judge of the Circuit Court of Washington County. On August 30, 1921, the prosecuting attorney.of said county filed in said court his verified petition in the name of the State of Missouri, at his relation, alleging the facts above set out and praying injunctive relief. Notice was served on defendants that a hearing would be held on the petition before respondent on September 1, 1921, and on that date relators appeared and filed a general denial and an application for change of venue. Eelators claim that respondent then announced that he would grant a temporary injunction against the defendants named in said petition before sustaining the application for change of venue if he found he had the power to do so. This is not admitted by respondent and is not taken as a fact. Respondent admits that h¿ stated that notice had been given as a matter of courtesy, but in his judgment he had the right to grant a temporary injunction without notice. The prosecuting attorney thereupon dismissed the case without objection from re-lators.

On September 6, 1921, the same being the last day of the August Term, 1921, of said circuit court, said prosecuting attorney filed a new petition, substantially similar in all respects to the petition filed in'the first suit, praying for an injunction restraining defendants from shipping said garbage to Summit and there unloading and feeding same to relators’ hogs. On the same day and without *175 notice to defendants of the pendency of the suit, respondent granted a temporary injunction as prayed. No injunction bond was or could he required of plaintiff. On the same day and after granting such temporary injunction, respondent adjourned his court to court in course, which convened October 1, 1921.

Relators contend that respondent indicated on the occasion of the hearing on the first suit that he had prejudged the case and in fact stated that if there was any way he could stop defendants he intended to do so. They also contend “that respondent has developed and manifested a strong ill will” toward them and that he “does not possess the unbiased frame of mind essential to a fair and impartial conduct of the trial of the issues involved in the case.” These contentions are denied by respondent.

Upon learning that said temporary injunction had been granted, relators sought and obtained issuance of our preliminary rule in prohibition, charging in their petition that the acts of respondent were arbitrary, unjust and an unreasonable exercise and gross abuse of the powers vested in him by virtue of his'office. If further facts appear necessary to a proper understanding of the case, they will be hereafter referred to.

Relators contend that under the circumstances above detailed respondent exceeded his jurisdiction when he granted the temporary injunction, without notice, to them, and immediately adjourned his court until October 1, .1921. On the other hand, respondent contends that no notice was required, or if required the case was one of such emergency as to authorize the granting of the temporary injunction upon the allegations of the petition of the prosecuting attorney without notice to defendants named therein.

Respondent’s jurisdiction in vacation and that of his court in term are clearly provided for in Section 1947, Revised Statutes 1909. If our preliminary rule be made absolute, it must be on the ground that respondent exceeded his jurisdiction. Citation of authorities to sus *176 tain onr right by prohibition to prevent inferior judicial tribunals from doing' acts in excess of their respective appropriate jurisdiction is scarcely necessary at this late day, and we content ourselves by referring only to St. Louis Railroad Co. v. Wear, 135 Mo. 230, on that point.

Of course prohibition may not be employed to fill the office of an appeal. Where a timely and adequate remedy is afforded by appeal, prohibition will be denied. [State ex rel. Thrash v. Lamb, 237 Mo. 437, l. c. 455; State ex rel. Mueller v. Wurdeman, 232 S. W. 1002.]

There is no statutory requirement in this State of notice to the adverse party as a prerequisite to the granting of temporary restraining orders and injunctions, except in proceedings to stay suits or judgments (Sec. 1952, R. S. 1919), and such was not the relief sought by plaintiff in the proceeding pending before respondent on September 6, 1921. We must therefore look to the adjudicated cases to determine whether such notice is required. We have been cited by relators to no cases where the granting of a temporary injunction has been stayed or prevented by our writ of prohibition as an excess of jurisdiction; but in a number of cases this court has announced the rule that notice should be required before the granting of such injunction, unless there exists a crying need for immediate action by injunction, and that the granting of injunctions in cases where notice is required amounted to an excessive exercise of jurisdiction. [Tuttle v. Blow, 176 Mo. 158, l. c. 171, 172; State ex rel. Wurdeman v. Reynolds, 275 Mo. 113, l. c. 126; State ex rel. McMillan v. Woodside, 254 Mo. 580, l. c. 591, 592.] The general rule is stated in 22 Cyc. at page 919, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 629, 291 Mo. 169, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-caron-v-dearing-mo-1921.