State ex rel. Nixon v. Superior Court

87 Wash. 603
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1915
DocketNos. 12950, 12956
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 Wash. 603 (State ex rel. Nixon v. Superior Court) 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. Nixon v. Superior Court, 87 Wash. 603 (Wash. 1915).

Opinion

Mount, J.

These are two applications for writs of mandate, to require the respondent judge to grant a motion for a change of judge upon the hearing of exceptions of creditors to the report of a receiver, “and for a change of judge in all other proceedings hereafter to be had in the receivership action.” The two applications were heard together, and will be considered together in this opinion.

It appears that, on October 6, 1914, the state, upon the relation of the Attorney General, filed a complaint against the Raymond Trust Company, in the superior court for Pacific county. That action resulted in the appointment of one A. W. Hammond as receiver for the Raymond Trust Company, an insolvent banking corporation. The receiver thereafter duly qualified and has ever since been acting as such receiver.

Prior to the appointment of the receiver, a petition, signed by a considerable number of depositors and creditors of the Raymond Trust Company, was presented to the judge, asking that one Reed be appointed as such receiver. The judge declined to appoint Mr. Reed, and appointed Mr. Hammond. Thereafter, on October 8, 1914?, a meeting of the creditors was held. The judge was invited to this meeting and was present. He was then requested to remove Mr. Hammond and appoint Mr. Reed as receiver. This request was also refused.

Thereafter a number of orders, ex parte and upon hearing in open court, were made and entered by the court. After-wards, on June 25, 1915, another request was made for the removal of Mr. Hammond as receiver. This request was also denied. Thereafter, on July 19, 1915, the relators in this proceeding filed with the clerk of the superior court for Pacific county a petition for the removal of the receiver, and [605]*605at the same time filed an affidavit of prejudice. This affidavit was made by Mr. Nixon, who stated, in substance, that he was one of the creditors of the Raymond Trust Company, insolvent, and that the judge was prejudiced against the affiant and other creditors of the Raymond Trust Company so that such creditors could not have a fair and impartial trial before such judge. This motion was denied. Thereafter an application was made to this court for a writ of mandate.

Afterwards the receiver filed a report of his doings as such receiver, and a time was fixed for the hearing upon the report, when the same creditors filed exceptions to the report and again filed a motion for change of judge. This motion was also denied, and another application was made to this court for another writ of mandate.

The respondent makes two contentions in this court why the writ of mandate should not issue, to the effect that, first, the relators are not parties to the receivership proceedings, and are therefore not authorized to disqualify the judge; and second, that the application for change of judge was not timely made.

The statute provides at 3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 209-1:

“No judge of a superior court of the state of Washington shall sit to hear or try any action or proceeding when it shall be established, as hereinafter provided, that such judge is prejudiced against any party or attorney, or the interest of any party or attorney appearing in such cause. . . .”

3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 209-2, provides:

“Any party to or any attorney appearing in any action or proceeding in a superior court, may establish such prejudice by motion supported by affidavit that the judge before whom the action is pending is prejudiced against such party or attorney, so that such party or attorney cannot, or believes that he cannot, have a fair and impartial trial before such judge; Provided, further, that no party or attorney shall be permitted to make more than one application in any action or proceeding under this act.”

[606]*606It is plain that the relators here were not named as parties in the original receivership case. The plaintiff in that case was the state of Washington upon the relation of the Attorney General. The defendant was the Raymond Trust Company, an insolvent banking corporation. While the creditors of the banking corporation are no doubt interested in the result of the receivership proceeding, they are not parties to that action. They are at most quasi parties, interested only in the proceeds of the assets of the insolvent corporation.

In the case of Wooding v. Wooding & Co., 10 Wash. 531, 39 Pac. 137, this court said:

“And this leads us to scan the method by which the appellants have sought to set aside the order appointing this receiver. Creditors are not. made parties to such actions, and appellants were not parties in this case. They were not intervenors, because the statute governing interventions does not cover such cases, and because they took none of the steps prescribed for the accomplishment of an intervention.”

And in Churchill v. Stephenson, 14 Wash. 620, 45 Pac. 28, this court said:

“In an action of this character the interest of a mere general or contract creditor is not of such a direct and immediate character as entitles him to intervene.”

In 34 Cyc. at page 343, the rule is stated as follows:

“Interventions by persons interested in the funds of a receivership will not be permitted if their rights may be conserved without it, since such interventions multiply the number of litigants, and, if begun in the case of one creditor, cannot be consistently denied as to others, thereby resulting in unnecessary expense and confusion of proceedings.”

It is plain, we think, that the relators are not parties to the receivership proceeding, and are therefore not authorized to disqualify the judge in the discharge of his duties as judge in the case where the receiver was appointed.

We are of the opinion, further, that the relators have not made timely application for a change of judge. We have no [607]*607doubt of the right of creditors of an insolvent corporation to petition the court appointing a receiver to remove him for cause, even though they are not named as parties in the proceeding. We think their interest is such that a petition may be filed and heard by the court. But we have held that applications for a change of judge must be timely made. In State ex rel. Lefebvre. v. Clifford, 65 Wash. 313, 118 Pac. 40, in discussing the provisions of the statute with reference to the right to a change of judge, we said:

“If literally construed, the right would exist at any time prior to the entering of the judgment. But to place such a construction on the law is to charge the law-making power with an intention to cripple and handicap the courts in their attempted enforcement of the law, to an intolerable extent. Hence the necessity of construction; and. construing the law and attempting to ascertain its meaning, we cannot conclude that it was intended by the act that a party could submit to the jurisdiction of the court by waiving his rights to object until by some ruling of the court in a case he becomes fearful that the judge is not favorable to his view of the case. In other words, he is not allowed to speculate upon what rulings the court will make on propositions that are involved in the case and, if the rulings do not happen to be in his favor, to then for the first time raise the jurisdictional question.”

In Garvey v. Skamser, 69 Wash.

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

Related

City of Valdosta v. Singleton
28 S.E.2d 759 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1944)
State Ex Rel. Howell v. Bank of Glenrock
253 P. 665 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1927)
State ex rel. Sheehan v. Reynolds
190 P. 321 (Washington Supreme Court, 1920)
State ex rel. Dunham v. Superior Court
106 Wash. 507 (Washington Supreme Court, 1919)
State ex rel. Farmer v. Bell
101 Wash. 133 (Washington Supreme Court, 1918)
State ex rel. Foster v. Superior Court
95 Wash. 647 (Washington Supreme Court, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 Wash. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-nixon-v-superior-court-wash-1915.