State ex rel. Haughey v. Ryan

79 S.W. 429, 180 Mo. 32, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 24, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 S.W. 429 (State ex rel. Haughey v. Ryan) 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. Haughey v. Ryan, 79 S.W. 429, 180 Mo. 32, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 47 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

POX, J.

This proceeding is predicated.upon an application by relators for a writ of prohibition. The preliminary rule was issued, and the cause is now submitted to this court for final determination, upon motion, by the Attorney-General, representing respondents, to dismiss the proceeding.

The purposes sought by this application are fully disclosed by the petition; hence, to intelligently comprehend the controverted questions, we must look to the petition, which is as follows:

“To the Honorable, the Supreme Court of Missouri:

“Come now the said Micheál Haughey, Aug. Bensieck, M. J. Cullen, Arthur Donnelly, C. M. Herman, P. P. Herold, J. D. Marshall, and ¥m, P. Mulhall, and give the court to understand and be informed that all of said relators are and were, at all times hereinafter stated, citizens of the State of Missouri and residents of the city of St. Louis, and engaged, either as individuals or as members of firms or corporations, in the livery business in said city; and that said E. S. Garver, Pord A. Allen and Thomas M. Jenkins claim that, by appointment of the Governor of the State of Missouri, they constitute and did constitute, at all times hereinafter stated, the Missouri State Board of Mediation and Arbitration attempted to be created by S. B. 112, of the Laws of Missouri, 1901, page 195, approved March 7, 1901, entitled, ‘Labor: Board of Mediation and Arbitration. An Act to repeal article 2 of chapter 121, of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1899, and to create a state board of mediation and arbitration, for the settlement of differences between employers and employees, and to define the powers and duties of said board, with an emergency clause,’ as amended by H. B. 505, Laws of Mis7 souri, 1903, page 218, approved March 23,1903, entitled, [36]*36‘Labor: Mediation and Arbitration. An Act to repeal section 5 of An Act entitled “An Act to create a state board of mediation and arbitration,” approved March 7, 1901, and to enact three new sections in lieu thereof, ’ and, as said board, assumed jurisdiction, as hereinafter stated; and that said H. F. Childers claims and claimed to be the secretary of said board by virtue of the appointment of said board, at all times hereinafter stated; that the Honorable 0 ’Neill Ryan is and was, at all times hereinafter stated, a judge of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, sitting in room 4 of said circuit court, and, as such, assumed jurisdiction, as hereinafter stated. That, on December 23, 1903, two pretended subpoenas, both purporting to be signed by said E. S. Carver, as chairman of said board, and by said H. F. Childers, as secretary of said board, one of which was addressed to said Michael Haughey, J. D. Marshall, Aug. Bensieck, and Arthur Donnelly, and the other of which to said ¥m. F. Mulhall, F. F. Herold, C. M. Herman and M. J. Cullen, were issued and placed in the hands of the sheriff of the city of St. Louis, by which said subpoenas all of said relators were commanded to appear before said board in the ‘Court of Appeals room at.courthouse in county and State aforesaid,’ on December 29, 1903, at 10 a. m., ‘then and there to testify and the truth to say in a certain inquiry now being made by said board, concerning a threatened strike, or lockout, of employees of St. Louis Liverymen’s Association.’ That, prior to the issuance of said pretended subpoenas, said board had made no effort whatever, as required by section 5 of said alleged act, as amended, to place itself in communication with ‘the employees of the St. Louis Liverymen’s Association,’ and said association, or with the employees of any liveryman in said city, and said liverymen, for the purpose of endeavoring ‘by mediation to effect a settlement’ between them. That the return on the first of said subpoenas is as follows:

[37]*37“ ‘RETURN. I hereby certify that I served the within subpoena in the city of St. Louis on the 26th day of December, 1903, by reading the same to the within named Michael Haughey, J. D. Marshall, Arthur Donnelly and Aug. Bensieck.

“ ‘Joseph F. Dickmann, Sheriff.

“ ‘Bogy, Noonan and Romansky.’ ”

That the return on the second of said subpoenas is as follows:

“ ‘RETURN. I hereby certify that I served the within subpoena, in the city of St. Louis, on the 24th day of December, 1903, by reading the same to the within named ¥m. F. Mulhall, F. F. Herold, M. J. Cullen, on December 26, and C. M. Herman on December 26th.

“ ‘C. N. Winke Phelan.’

“That said returns are null and void on their face.

“That as to Aug. Bensieck the only attempt at service was for someone, unknown to said Bensieck, to state over the telephone that he was reading to him a paper, which he never saw, and which he has no means of identifying.

“That certified copies of both said subpoenas and the returns thereon, and of the order for the attachment indorsed on one of them, as hereinafter stated, are hereto attached and marked Exhibits A and B.

‘ ‘ That on December 29, 1903, said relators are informed and believe that said board was not in session, because of the absence of said secretary. „

“That on December 30, 1903, said relators appeared before said board by their attorney, for the sole purpose of insisting that they had not been regularly summoned' and could not be compelled to testify, and that said board had no jurisdiction in the premises.

“That on December 30, 1903, said board applied to the Honorable James R. Kinealy, a judge of said circuit [38]*38court, to issue an attachment against said Haughey, Marshall, Bensieck and Donnelly, and that said judge attempted to order said attachment to issue, as shown by his order, indorsed on the certified copy of said pretended subpoena, hereto attached and marked ‘Exhibit A, ’ said order being as follows:

‘ ‘ ‘ December 30,1903.

“ ‘Let attachments issue for above witnesses, returnable December 31st, at 2 p. m. J. R. K. ’

“That, thereupon, a pretended joint attachment ■was issued against all of said relators, commanding them and each of them to appear before said board ‘in the room of the Court of Appeals, in the courthouse in the city of St. Louis, on the 31st day of December, 1903, at 2 o’clock p. m., then and there to testify and the truth to say in a certain inquiry now being made by said board, concerning a threatened strike, or lockout, of the employees of the St. Louis Liverymen’s Association,’ all of which will more fully appear from a certified copy of said pretended attachment and the return thereon, hereto attached and marked ‘Exhibit C.’

“That on December 31, 1903, said relators, in accordance with the terms of said pretended attachment, were brought before said board, at the time specified therein, by said sheriff, and, thereupon, said relators filed with said board through their attorney, a paper, a certified copy of which is hereto atached, marked ‘Exhibit D, ’ in which they stated that they were only present in response to said subpoenas and the attachment, thereon, and expressly disclaimed that there was any existing controversy between their employees and themselves, and expressly disclaimed that they were present for the purpose of submitting any matter to arbitration, and further stated that none of them represented the so-called ‘St. Louis Liverymen’s Association,’ the alleged trouble between which and its employees was proposed do be investigated by the said board. That all of said facts, set out in said paper, were and are still true.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 429, 180 Mo. 32, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-haughey-v-ryan-mo-1904.