State Ex Rel. Grieve v. District Court of Eighth Judicial District Within & for Natrona County

260 P. 174, 37 Wyo. 169, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 77
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1927
Docket1450
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 P. 174 (State Ex Rel. Grieve v. District Court of Eighth Judicial District Within & for Natrona County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming 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. Grieve v. District Court of Eighth Judicial District Within & for Natrona County, 260 P. 174, 37 Wyo. 169, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 77 (Wyo. 1927).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This is an original proceeding in this court for a writ of prohibition against the district court of Natrona County and the judge thereof. A temporary or conditional writ, usually referred to as an alternative writ, to distinguish it from a writ absolute, was, as authorized by our rules, issued upon the filing and presentation of the petition, commanding the said court and judge to desist and refrain from any further proceedings in the matter complained of until the further order of this court, and, on the date fixed *171 therein as the answer day, to show cause why said court and judge should not be absolutely prohibited from any such further proceedings.

The temporary writ commanded that a copy thereof, together with a copy of the petition, be served, one upon the said court and the judge thereof, and one upon each of certain defendants in the proceeding sought to be prohibited, viz: The Central Trading Company, the Table Supply Company, each a corporation, and Paul Huber and Alma Huber. An answer was filed herein by the Central Trading Company, denying the illegality of the proceeding sought to be prohibited and alleging that as to errors of law therein, if any, there is an adequate remedy by appeal. A motion was filed on behalf of the court and judge for an order quashing the temporary writ, vacating the order allowing it, and dismissing the petition herein. That motion is, in effect, a demurrer and may be so treated. A separate motion of the Table Supply Company was filed, adopting the said motion of the court and judge.. Upon the issues thus presented, the entire matter has been argued and submitted for final disposition.

The action wherein the proceedings sought to be prohibited occurred or were threatened was brought by Harriet T. Grieve, the relator here, to restrain by injunction Paul Huber, Alma Huber, Central Trading Company and Table Supply Company, from molesting or interfering with her alleged possession of certain described real estate,, and in that action a temporary restraining order was issued and served. After the filing of motions to dissolve that order, and separate answers by the Central Trading Company and the Table Supply Company denying the fact of plaintiff’s possession prior to the issuance and service of said order, the cause was heard upon such motions, and also upon the merits; the plaintiff being granted leave, upon her request, to deny generally the averments of said answers and the facts stated in certain affidavits filed in. *172 support of tbe motions to dissolve. Upon such bearing oral evidence was also introduced and a transcript thereof is attached to the petition for the writ of prohibition. The eourt order disposing of the matter directed that the temporary restraining order be dissolved; that the petition be dismissed; that the defendants Table Supply Company and Central Trading Company have and recover their costs; and that the possession of the premises in controversy be restored to the defendant Central Trading Company ; such restoration to be made on or before midnight of May 31, 1927. The complaint here refers solely to the order for a restoration of the premises, and further proceedings under that order are what is sought to be prohibited.

The plaintiff below, relator here, filed a motion in said cause to set aside said judgment for the reason that the order of restitution is illegal, since said action is neither an action of ejectment nor an action of forcible entry and detainer, and for the further reason that the eourt committed errors of law in dismissing the petition. That motion was evidently intended to and did, we think, raise the point of the court’s jurisdiction, which, under our decisions, is required as a condition precedent to the granting of a writ of prohibition. State v. District Court, 31 Wyo. 413, 227 Pac. 378. The petition here alleges that the relator, plaintiff in the cause below, was and is a mortgagee in possession after foreclosure, and that the remedy by appeal or petition in error is inadequate; and express reference is made to all of the papers and pleadings in the injunction suit and in the action for the foreclosure of Mrs. Grieve’s mortgage.

It is expressly alleged here also that in said foreclosure action a decree was entered in favor of Mrs. Grieve for the amount due upon her mortgage, the exact sum not being alleged, but appears to have exceeded $50,000.00 ; that said judgment directed an order for the sale of the *173 premises to issue, and that thereafter, on October 2, 1926, after duly publishing statutory notice of sale, the said premises were sold by the sheriff to the relator for $40,000.00; that the sale was confirmed, and, upon the expiration of the redemption period, that the premises were conveyed to the relator by sheriff’s deed, which was duly recorded on April 26, 1927. It is further alleged that the relator thereupon demanded possession of the premises, which demand was refused, and that, on April 30, 1927, she took “quiet and peaceable possession” thereof. And it appeared that on that date, also, the temporary restraining order was issued and served, the alleged taking of possession and the service of the restraining order occurring on the evening of that date between nine and 10:30 or eleven o ’clock; the order in which said events occurred being a matter in dispute.

It might be said, indeed, that the order in which said events occurred is the only matter of fact in dispute for consideration in this proceeding. That Mrs. Grieve finally obtained exclusive possession on the evening of April 30 is not disputed. But that she did so before the service of the restraining order is disputed, and that any such possession as she had or was claiming to have prior to that service was peaceable is disputed by the pleadings both in this proceeding and in the injunction suit; and upon the evidence in the injunction suit that was a matter to be determined as a mixed question of fact and law.

Bach of the answers in said suit — the answer of the Table Supply Company, who claimed to have been a tenant in actual possession of the premises, and the answer of the Central Trading Company, claiming to have been the legal title holder of the premises and in possession through its tenant, the Table Supply Company, not only denied plaintiff’s possession prior to said service of the restraining order but alleged that she was prior thereto attempting to take forcible possession of the premises and that they *174 were resisting the same. Each of said answers contained a prayer that upon the dissolution of the restraining order the possession of the premises be restored to said answering defendant. And thus the issues were presented whether prior to the issuance and service of the restraining order the plaintiff had any possession of the premises except such as had been forcibly acquired, and whether even that possession was obtained otherwise than by the use and assistance of the restraining order.

The oral evidence explains the ownership and occupancy of the premises from the time the defendants in the injunction suit became connected therewith until and including the events of April 30, 1927, when the alleged change of possession occurred. It may be summarized as follows:

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Related

Hiatt v. La Fever
242 P.2d 214 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1952)
Grieve v. Huber
266 P. 128 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 P. 174, 37 Wyo. 169, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-grieve-v-district-court-of-eighth-judicial-district-within-wyo-1927.