State ex rel. Ferguson v. Grady

127 P. 305, 71 Wash. 1, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 680
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1912
DocketNo. 10760
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 127 P. 305 (State ex rel. Ferguson v. Grady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Ferguson v. Grady, 127 P. 305, 71 Wash. 1, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 680 (Wash. 1912).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

This is an original application for a writ of mandamus commanding the respondent to fix a supersedeas bond, for the purpose of continuing in force pending an appeal a restraining order, issued without notice, which it is claimed became by agreement a temporary injunction. The record as made in this court shows the following: On

August 21, 1912, the relators, as plaintiffs, began an action in the superior court of Yakima county against the city of Toppenish, the mayor, councilmen and clerk of the city and the Barber Asphalt Paving Company, as defendants, seeking to enjoin the defendants city of Toppenish and the persons named as officers thereof from entering into a contract with the defendant Barber Asphalt Paving Company for paving certain streets of the defendant city. On the filing of the complaint, a temporary restraining order was issued without notice to the defendants, restraining the defendants from entering into such contract before a day certain named therein, and requiring them to appear on the day named and show cause, if any they had, why a temporary injunction should not be issued enjoining the execution of the contract pending the final determination of the cause. The restraining order and order to show cause was duly served on all of the defendants except the defendant the Barber Asphalt Paving Company. Prior to the time fixed for the hearing, the defendants appeared and answered the complaint on the merits, and a reply to the answer was duly served and filed, in which an additional cause of action to the cause of action stated in the complaint was set forth.

The relators in their application for the writ of mandamus recite -the subsequent proceedings in the following language:

“That on the said 21th day of August, 1912, at the hour appointed in the said order to show cause, plaintiffs, by their attorneys Bonsted & Kemp, and G. G. Lee, and the defendants, by their attorneys, Englehart &. Rigg, Peters & Powell and W. H. Shea, Jr., appeared before the Honorable Thomas E. Grady, judge of said superior court, defendant herein, whereupon the following proceedings were had. [3]*3Plaintiffs moved that the new matter set up in their reply be treated as an amendment to their said complaint, to which motion counsel for defendants consented, and motion was allowed by the court. Thereupon Mr. Englehart, of counsel for defendants, briefly reviewed the allegations of the complaint, and suggested to the court that the hearing upon the order to show cause would necessarily involve trying all the issues in the case, and that if satisfactory to the court and to counsel for plaintiffs, that the court fix a date for trial at which time the whole case would be heard on its merits, and that in the meantime the restraining order theretofore issued, remain in full force and effect, pending the final determination of the action, to all of which counsel for plaintiffs consented and the court accordingly fixed as the date of trial the 4th day of September, 1912.
“That said cause came on for trial on the said 4th day of September, and the whole cause was tried on its merits, the tx'ial continuing for three (3) full days; that thereafter and on the 19th day of Septembex’, 1912, the court rendered its decision, and ordei'ed judgment in favor of defendants and dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint, and adjudged and decreed that any and all restraining orders theretofore issued, in said action, be of no fux’ther force or effect, whereupon deponent, as one of counsel for plaintiffs, duly excepted to the judgment of the coux't, and gave notice in open court before the judge thereof, the defendant above named, that plaintiffs appeal fx’om said judgment to the supreme coui't of the state of Washington, that thereupon the court directed the clerk of said court to make entry of such notice of appeal in the jouxmal of the court; that immediately thereafter deponent, as one of counsel for plaintiffs, moved the court to fixe the penalty of the bond to be filed by plaintiffs for the purpose of continuing in force, dux'ing the pendency of such appeal, the temporary injunction theretofox-e granted in said cause; that the court continued the hearixxg of said motion until Monday, the 23rd day of September, 1912, at 1:30 p. m., at which time plaintiffs appeared before said court by deponent as their counsel, defendants appearing by Ira P. Englehart, of counsel, and after hearing ax-gument of counsel the court refused to fix the amount of said supersedeas bond and ever since has and still refuses to fix the amount of such bond.”

[4]*4The answer of the trial judge, as set forth in his return to the application for the writ, recites the proceedings as follows:

“And I further allege and aver that all matters and things in said affidavit of D. H. Bonsted contained are true and correct, except that on the 24th day of August, 1912, instead of the proceedings being had at said time as set up and stated by said D. H. Bonsted in his said affidavit in said lines seven to twenty-three, inclusive, of page four thereof, being had, the following took place and occurred at said time.
“It was agreed in addition to the matters and things referred to in said affidavit of D. H. Bonsted, that the defendants’ answer should stand as the answer to the plaintiffs’ amended complaint in said action. Thereupon Mr. Englehart, of counsel for defendants, briefly reviewed the allegations of the pleadings, and suggested to the court that the hearing upon the order to show cause why a temporary injunction pending the final disposition of the case should or should not issue, would probably involve trying all the issues in the case at that hearing in advance of the final trial, and that the effect would be to have two full trials of the same issues; that the defendants were ready to go ahead and then and there try the question of whether a temporary injunction should issue in the case or not, pending the final hearing, but were willing that the whole question should be tried at a later date if the court and counsel for plaintiffs were willing. The counsel for plaintiffs and defendants, in open court before me, then agreed that no hearing should be had upon the show cause order already issued, that day; that the original restraining order entered without notice and . then outstanding, should remain in statu quo and the hearing on said show cause order should be continued until September 4th, 1912, at ten o’clock a. m., when the question would be tried out as to whether any injunction of any kind or at all should issue in the case. Ño restraining order or injunction of any kind whatsoever, other than the one a copy of which is referred to in the relators’ application herein, was ever made or entered in said action, and it was issued without notice to defendants or either of them. At the time appointed, to wit, September 4th, 1912, at ten o’clock a. m., the said action came on for tidal before me, was tried, and thereafter and on the 19th day of September, 1912, I ren[5]*5dered my decision as superior judge, and entered judgment in favor of the defendants, and decided that no injunction of any kind or at all should issue in favor of the plaintiffs or either of them, and against the defendants, or either of them, in said action. That I did not fix the amount of a supersedeas bond in said action, at the request of relators, because no temporary injunction had ever been issued in said action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 P. 305, 71 Wash. 1, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ferguson-v-grady-wash-1912.