State Ex Rel. Goethe v. Parks

179 So. 780, 131 Fla. 741
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 10, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 So. 780 (State Ex Rel. Goethe v. Parks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Goethe v. Parks, 179 So. 780, 131 Fla. 741 (Fla. 1938).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

An alternative writ of mandamus was issued from this Court, predicated upon a petition of the plaintiffs in a chancery suit who are relators m this cause, containing allegations and exhibits in support of contentions that the Circuit Court of Hillsborough County “was without power or authority to dismiss” a stated chancery “cause and suppress the testimony that had been taken,” as the court had done; and that in so doing the court vio *743 lated the organic provision that “all courts in this State shall be open, so that every person, for any injury done him in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law, and right and justice shall be administered without sale, denial or delay,” Section 4, Declaration of Rights.

The writ commanded the Circuit Judge to enter an order reinstating the cause and required him to modify his order whereby he suppressed the testimony taken in said cause or else to show cause for not doing so.

It was not necessary to make the defendants in the chancery cause respondents in this proceeding. See State, ex rel., v. Cornelius, Judge, 100 Fla. 292, 129 So. 752.

No judgment is required to be entered, but it is sought merely to have reinstated a cause dismissed without authority. State, ex rel., v. Trustees, 20 Fla. 402; State, ex rel. Sunday, v. Richards, 50 Fla. 284, 26 So. 1014; State v. Wolfe, 58 Fla. 523, 50 So. 511; State, ex rel., v. Thompson, 113 Fla. 419, 151 So. 704; State, ex rel., v. Carey, 121 Fla. 515, 164 So. 199, are not controlling in cases such as the one here considered.

The respondent herein filed a demurrer and return or answer to the alternative writ. The relators filed a motion for a peremptory writ notwithstanding the answer. The cause has been ably argued.

It appears that after issue joined in a stated chancery suit, a master was appointed by the court “to take proofs on behalf of the parties * * * and to report the same to the court with all due speed, but without any findings of law or fact.” A stenographer or reporter was designated by the master to take down in shorthand and transcribe the proofs on behalf of the parties to the cause.

After more than eight hundred pages of testimony had been taken, the defendants in the chancery cause learned *744 that the master and the stenographer-reporter had entered into agreements respecting compensation for their services in the cause. The master’s agreement was with J. Milton McEwen, a then attorney for the plaintiffs, and was by letter as follows:

“As per our conversation of today I beg to advise you that as I understand it my compensation for acting as Master in the case of Jack O. Goethe, as Receiver, etc., et al. v. N. A. Portocarrero, et al., in so far as all plaintiffs are concerned, will not amount to more than $25.00, regardless of the time I have to give to this case.
“The above is to take place in case the said plaintiffs should lose the case.
“However, if the said plaintiffs do win the above stated case and recover, then my compensation for acting as Master in said case is to be determined by said plaintiffs and myself, but in the event we are unable to agree, then same shall be fixed by the Court.”

The stenographer’s agreement with one of the plaintiffs, J. L. Avellanal, in the chancery suit was: Eight dollars per day and thirty cents per page for transcribing if plaintiff should lose the suit, and ten dollars per day and fifty cents for transcribing if plaintiffs should win and collect from the defendants. Present counsel for the parties had no knowledge of the contracts complained of.

By petition filed in the chancery suit by the defendants therein, the court was asked that the contracts made by the master and stenographer as above stated be abrogated as being contrary to public policy and void, and further:

“3rd. That the appointment of W. J. Bivens as Master to take and report the proofs in this cause be revoked, and the said W. J. Bivens be directed and required to certify and file in this cause a transcript of the testimony hereto *745 fore taken on behalf of the parties to this cause, including the exhibits filed by them, and that this Honorable Court determine and fix what compensation, if any, shall be allowed to the said W. J. Bivens for his services as Master in this cause and fix and determine when and by whom said compensation shall be paid.
“4th. That the appointment of Bert E. Betts as stenographer to take and transcribe the testimony in this cause be revoked, and that the Court fix such compensation, if any, as shall be allowed the said Bert E. Betts for the services heretofore rendered by him in this cause, and when and by whom the same shall be paid.
“5th. That if the plaintiffs to this cause, or any of them fail and refuse to abrogate and surrender the two contracts hereinbefore alleged in conformity with the orders of the court in this cause, that all proofs heretofore taken in this cause by the parties thereto pursuant to the order of reference heretofore entered therein appointing the said W. J. Bivens as Special Master to take and report said proofs, be revoked and taken for naught, and the said W. J. Bivens directed by order of this Honorable Court to restore to the defendants or their counsel all such exhibits as were produced and filed by them before the said W. J. Bivens, and that the said W. J. Bivens be directed and ordered to restore to the plaintiffs or their counsel all exhibits by them produced and filed before the said W. J. Bivens, and that the court decree to be paid and restored to the defendants to this cause, and by whom, the sum of $232.40, which counsel for the defendants have heretofore paid to the said' Bert E. Betts as stenographer for the services charged by him for per diem and for the original transcript written out and furnished by the said Bert E. Betts of the testimony taken on behalf of the defendants in said cause, and the sum of $122.50 paid by the defendants to R. F. Johnson, *746 as hereinbefore alleged, and that unless the same be paid in conformity with the orders of the court that the bill of complaint in this cause be .dismissed.
“6th. And that the court enter such further and other order or orders in this cause as may be agreeable to the usages of equity and the practice, obtaining in chancery to meet the exigencies which have arisen by virtue of the facts herein alleged.”
Separate answers were filed by the master and the stenographer and by J. L. Avellanal, one of the plaintiffs in the chancery suit with whom the contract above referred to was made by the stenographer relative to the stenographer’s compensation. The answers contain averments tending to show good faith and want of intent to do anything improper in making the contracts relating to the master’s and stenographer’s compensation for taking and transcribing the testimony in the chancery cause.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Schmidt v. Crusoe
878 So. 2d 361 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2003)
State Ex Rel. First Presbyterian Church v. Fuller
182 So. 888 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 So. 780, 131 Fla. 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-goethe-v-parks-fla-1938.