State Ex Rel. Goff v. O'Neil

286 N.W. 316, 205 Minn. 366, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 774
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 26, 1939
DocketNos. 31,981, 31,994.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 286 N.W. 316 (State Ex Rel. Goff v. O'Neil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Goff v. O'Neil, 286 N.W. 316, 205 Minn. 366, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 774 (Mich. 1939).

Opinions

Holt, Justice.

Action by the state on relation of the county attorney of Henne-pin county to enjoin defendant from conducting a small loan business in the city of Minneapolis in which usury is invariably exacted. Upon the verified complaint and accompanying affidavits the court, September 23, 1938, made an ex parte order appointing a receiver to take over defendant’s said business and issued a temporary restraining order. On the same date the summons, with com *368 plaint and affidavits attached, was served upon defendant personally together with notice of motion for a temporary injunction, and the court also issued an order for defendant to show cause October 10, 1938, the time named in plaintiff’s motion, why such temporary injunction should not issue pendente lite and why such receiver should not continue to act. Defendant answered and filed counter affidavits, and a hearing was had. October 28, 1938, the court filed an order granting a temporary injunction and continuing the receivership. September 29, 1938, defendant procured from the court an order on plaintiff to show cause why the order appointing the receiver should not be revoked and the receiver directed to restore the property seized to defendant. A hearing was had and by order filed October 17, 1938, the order to show cause was discharged. Defendant appeals from both the order filed October 28 and the one filed October 17.

That the complaint and supporting affidavits herein did not present an emergency authorizing the court on an ex parte application to appoint a receiver of defendant’s business must be considered settled by State ex rel. Claude v. District Court, 204 Minn. 415, 283 N. W. 738. The complaint upon which a receiver ex parte was there appointed was substantially of the same import as the one herein. However, while the court here erred in appointing a receiver ex pm~te, the record shows the following whereby defendant both had notice and gave notice and had two hearings on the merits as to whether or not in this action there should be a temporary restraining order or injunction issued, and as to whether or not there should be a receiver of defendant’s business pendente lite. The court, on September 23, 1938, without notice to defendant, appointed a receiver of his said business; but on the same day the summons, with complaint and affidavits attached, was served upon defendant, together with notice of motion to be heard October 10, 1938, for a restraining order or temporary injunction and for the retention of the receivership pending suit, and, in addition, the court issued an order for defendant to show cause at the hearing of the motion why it should not be granted. So, for the hearing, there was adequate notice, and defendant appeared generally and *369 submitted numerous counter affidavits. Having heard the parties, the court filed its order October 28,1938, granting plaintiff’s motion. Not only that, but on September 29, 1938, defendant procured an order from the court directing plaintiff to show cause why the order of September 23, 1938, appointing a receiver herein of defendant’s business, should not be revoked and the business seized by the receiver restored to defendant. Both parties were heard, and the order to show cause was discharged by order filed October 17, 1938. So there have been two hearings on notice as to whether on the merits a receiver was properly appointed pendente lite. Therefore, on this appeal, the want of notice to defendant of the application for a receiver in the action is out of the case. High, Receivers (4 ed.) § 112, p. 131, states:

“But where the propriety of the action of the court in appointing a receiver without notice has been considered by the court upon a motion to discharge the receiver and the court has sustained the original order by refusing to discharge him, the want of notice of the appointment is thereby cured.” Schmid v. Ballard, 175 Minn. 138, 220 N. W. 423; Boyd v. Brown, 79 Col. 568, 247 P. 181; Bristow v. Home Bldg. Co. 91 Va. 18, 20 S. E. 946, 947.

It is to be noted that the appeal is from two interlocutory orders. The action is for an injunction enjoining defendant from conducting a business wherein the usury law is invariably violated. If the action is maintainable, there is judicial discretion in granting or refusing the ancillary remedies of a receiver, and a temporary injunction or restraining order.

Defendant by his answer avers that the county attorney is not a proper party plaintiff. Whether the county attorney in his official capacity is empowered to institute a suit of this nature need not now be decided, for it is conceded that the attorney general has authority to institute such a suit on behalf of the state. 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 109, reads:

“The attorney general shall appear for the state in all causes in the supreme and federal courts wherein the state is directly in *370 terested; also in all civil causes of like nature in the district courts; whenever, in his opinion, the interests of the state require it.”

1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 926, relating to the duties of a county-attorney, provides that he, “whenever requested by the attorney general, shall appear for the state in any case instituted by such' attorney general in his county.”

In this court on this appeal the attorney general has come in and filed a supplemental brief with the county attorney. There can be no doubt of the attorney general’s power to step into a cause where the state is a party and take over or carry on the same regardless of the fact that it had been instituted by the county attorney on behalf of the state. A supplemental record also shows that in the court below the attorney general entered an appearance on behalf of the state in this case and joins as a relator herein and adopts this action as his own. Defendant’s objection to the attorney general’s appearance in the appeals must be overruled. And we are of the opinion that by the attorney general so coming in for the state, the action must here be considered in the same manner as if originally instituted by him instead of by the county attorney.

The next proposition is: Does the complaint state a cause of action for injunctive relief? It is conceded that our statutes forbidding the taking of usury do not subject the transgressor to a penalty by way of imprisonment or fine. So there is no remedy for usury under the criminal law. The plaintiff contends that the business of usury as carried on by defendant is in the nature of a public nuisance and as such may properly be enjoined. In Town of Linden v. Fischer, 154 Minn. 354, 357, 191 N. W. 901, 902, in an action to enjoin an unlicensed dance hall, the court said:

“And although equity Avill not ordinarily, by injunction or otherwise, restrain the commission of a crime, it will thus interpose its authority in those cases where the threatened act or conduct of the party will amount to a continuing public nuisance as well as a crime. Such Avould be the result of repeated violations of the bylaw in question. It prohibits public dances without a license, and a violation thereof would constitute a crime; at the same time *371

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 N.W. 316, 205 Minn. 366, 1939 Minn. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-goff-v-oneil-minn-1939.