State ex rel. Nicomen Boom Co. v. North Shore Boom & Driving Co.

103 P. 426, 55 Wash. 1, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 699
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1909
DocketNo. 7512
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 103 P. 426 (State ex rel. Nicomen Boom Co. v. North Shore Boom & Driving Co.) 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. Nicomen Boom Co. v. North Shore Boom & Driving Co., 103 P. 426, 55 Wash. 1, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 699 (Wash. 1909).

Opinions

Chadwick, J.

From the judgment of this court, entered on the 6th day of December, 1905, the respondent, North Shore Boom & Driving Company, prosecuted an appeal to the supreme court of the United States. To secure its rights pending the appeal, it obtained an order fixing a supersedeas in the sum of $10,000. This order was made on the 17th day of January, 1906. The North Shore Boom Company has operated its booms in defiance of the rights of the relator. On the 13th day of March, 1907, the North Shore Boom Company, conceiving that its appeal might not be effectual in that it might be determined that an appeal would not lie from the judgment of this court, or if the supreme court of the United States should hold that its attempted removal of the case to the Federal court was in fact a proceeding by writ of review in that it asked for a review of the judgment of the superior court rather than of this court, sued out a writ of review, upon which a supersedeas was fixed in the sum of $20,000. Thereafter, the first appeal or writ (whichever it may be called is not now material) was dismissed in the supreme court of the United States upon motion of the respondent, the North Shore Boom Company. The last proceeding went to final hearing, and was determined on the 23d day of February, 1909. The court refused to consider the merits of the [4]*4controversy, and dismissed the writ for the want of jurisdiction, holding that no Federal question was involved. North Shore Boom & Driving Co. v. Nicomen Boom Co., 212 U. S. 406, 29 Sup. Ct. 355, 53 L. Ed. 574.

Pending these attempts to review the judgment .of the state courts, respondent proceeded with its booming operations in the North river. Acting upon the assumption that the first attempt to appeal was ineffectual for any purpose and that the second attempted review was insufficient to confer jurisdiction on the Federal courts or to warrant á supersedeas, relator instituted this proceeding, setting up the facts in detail as we have briefly outlined them, and praying for an order adjudging respondent guilty of contempt; that its officers and stockholders be fined in the sum of $300 each, and imprisoned for a period of six months, and that it recover the sum of $27,000, alleged to be the damages sustained by reason of the unwarranted interruption of its booming privileges. ' Respondents, upon rule to show cause, set up the two supersedeas orders and the proceedings in the Federal court in justification of its conduct. After trial, the court found that the respondent had not been guilty of contempt, the real basis for this finding being that respondent, The North Shore Boom Company, was operating under a supersedeas issued by this court.

Respondents have moved to dismiss the appeal, upon the ground that no appeal lies from an order purging a respondent in contempt proceedings. This rule would no doubt prevail in all cases where a party was cited to answer to a charge of contumacy affecting the dignity and ordinary processes of the court, and will be now followed by us in so far as the attempt to impose a fine and imprisonment on respondents is concerned. But the law of this state goes further than the rules of the common law governing contempts, and in cases of this kind permits the award of damages resulting to the private interest affected by the order of the court which has been disregarded and set at naught. It is a quasi civil action [5]*5and, when so regarded, either party aggrieved has the right of appeal. It is even expressly provided in the chapter on contempts and their punishments, Bal. Code, § 5811 (P. C. § 1480), that an appeal will lie “in like manner and with like effect as from judgment in an action.” The distinction as well as the rule governing this class of cases is well stated in the case of Morgan’s Sons, Co. v. Gibson, 122 Fed. 420, 423:

“It is a well-known fact, to which allusion has twice been made in decisions of this court (In re Reese, 47 C. C. A. 87, 90, 107 Fed. 942, 945; In re Nevitt, 54 C. C. A. 622, 117 Fed. 488, 458), that contempts of court are of two lands— those that are prosecuted to punish persons for showing disrespect to the courts, either by offensive conduct in their presence or by setting their authority at defiance, in the prosecution of which the entire public is immediately interested because the welfare of the courts is concerned; and those contempt proceedings that are inaugurated at the instance of some private litigant or litigants to compel obedience to an order or decree made in the case for the protection of their individual rights. In the latter class of cases the public at large is not directly interested. The proceeding does not partake of the character of a public prosecution at the instance of the state, as for a crime committed in setting the authority of its courts at defiance, but the proceeding is rather of a civil or remedial nature, for the benefit of a particular individual or individuals whose rights cannot be otherwise preserved. The distinction between the two kinds of contempt has been recognized in other cases. People etc. v. Diedrich, 141 Ill. 669, 670, 30 N. E. 1038, and cases cited. The case in hand is obviously a contempt proceeding of a civil and remedial nature as distinguished from one of a public or criminal character. The public had no special concern in the question whether the appellee had used words on his labels which violated the injunction, but the appellant was deeply interested in that question, since, if the charge was true, it affected a property right which he had succeeded in establishing. Moreover, if that right was being invaded by the appellee, notwithstanding the decree, the court which entered the decree could with no greater propriety refuse relief when the fact was called to its attention by the appellant, than it could withhold an execution to collect a judgment which it [6]*6liad rendered. We are of opinion, therefore, that the final action of a court in such a case as the one at bar, whether it be an order discharging the rule to show cause or one imposing a fine tantamount to the injury that has been sustained by the complaining party, is subject to review, and that in equity cases like the one at hand, where the object is to enforce the provisions of a final decree and compel obedience thereto, the remedy is by such an appeal as was taken.”

See, also Vilter Mfg. Co. v. Humphrey, 132 Wis. 587, 112 N. W. 1095, 13 L. R. A. (N. S.) 591; State ex rel. Denham v. Superior Court, 28 Wash. 590, 68 Pac. 1051.

The decision of the supreme court of the United States in the principal case has, with one exception which we shall hereafter notice, disposed of the other grounds relied on to dismiss the appeal. The motion is denied.

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Bluebook (online)
103 P. 426, 55 Wash. 1, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-nicomen-boom-co-v-north-shore-boom-driving-co-wash-1909.