State Ex Rel. Tibbals v. District Court of the Ninth Judicial District

292 P. 897, 42 Wyo. 214, 71 A.L.R. 993, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 46
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1930
Docket1667
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 292 P. 897 (State Ex Rel. Tibbals v. District Court of the Ninth Judicial District) 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. Tibbals v. District Court of the Ninth Judicial District, 292 P. 897, 42 Wyo. 214, 71 A.L.R. 993, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 46 (Wyo. 1930).

Opinion

*219 Blume, Chief Justice.

This is an original proceeding in this court, in which the relator asks for a writ of mandamus in the first cause of action and for a writ of prohibition in the second. The respondents have demurred to the petition, claiming that the facts stated are insufficient to constitute a, cause of action. The demurrer has been argued and is now up for disposition. The following facts appear from the petition: Case No. 4182, of Fremont County, Wyoming, entitled Tibbals v. Keys, et al., was appealed in this court. Tibbals v. Keys, 40 Wyo. 524, 281 Pac. 190. The judgment of the trial court was modified; a trust was declared in certain real property in the sum of $17,500, and the property was directed to be sold. A mandate from this court was issued accordingly. On April 26, 1930, judgment was rendered in the court below in accordance with such mandate. Previous thereto, however, on March 11, 1930, the Federal Gold Mining Company had filed an application in that case to be permitted to intervene, claiming to be the owner of the property. That right was denied by an order of April 26, 1930. Notice of appeal from this order was given and a supersedeas was granted pending appeal to this court. On April 26, 1930, there was also pending in the District Court of Fremont County another case, numbered 4212, in which Tibbals was plaintiff and the Federal Gold Mining Company was defendant, and in which the plaintiff sought to litigate rights in the same property involved in Tibbals v. Keys, et al. Up to, and including part of, the date last *220 mentioned, tbe ease was pending on demurrer, and before any answer asking affirmative relief was filed, Tibbals, the plaintiff, moved the court to dismiss the case without prejudice. The court took the view that the case ought not to be dismissed except with prejudice, and because plaintiff was unwilling to agree to that condition, overruled the motion; and, further, upon application, it immediately issued a restraining order in ease No. 4182 staying further proceedings therein until the issues in case No. 4212 had been investigated and determined by the court. The order overruling the motion to dismiss, while made as of April 26, 1980, was not actually signed and filed for record until May 10, 1930. And in the meantime, and sometime on April 26, 1930, the Federal Gold Mining Company filed an answer in Case No. 4212 and prayed affirmative relief therein.

1. Counsel for relator seems to claim, if we do not misconstrue his contention, that since this court by its mandate directed a sale of the property involved in Tibbals v. Keys, such sale must be had regardless of the rights of any party whatsoever, and that a restraining order of any kind is necessarily in conflict with the mandate of this court. "We cannot assent to so broad a claim. A judgment operates only between the parties thereto and their privies and has no effect upon the rights of an independent third party. We are not prepared to hold that this or any other court may order a sale of property belonging to a third party without giving him an opportunity, at least upon request, to present and assert his rights. See 23 C. J. 553, et seq. Here the Federal Gold Mining Company claims to be the owner of the property involved in case No. 4182, and to have been such owner long before suit in that case was brought. It was, so far as the records show, never a party to the action in which a mandate was issued by this court. The fact that it had knowledge thereof and might have come into court is no answer. Tibbals did not choose to bring it into court, and if its rights have not been disposed of, that would seem to be the fault as much of Tibbals him *221 self as of the Federal Gold Mining Company. If it is true, as counsel for the relator herein elaims, that because of certain extraneous facts the Federal Gold Mining Company was in truth a party in Case No. 4182, that question ought not to he settled in this proceeding, hut only upon a determination of the facts in the proper case hy the trial court. The writ of mandamus is a discretionary writ; the rights of the relator must he clear, and if its issuance depended upon the points heretofore discussed, we should feel constrained to deny it.

2. As stated above, the Federal Gold Mining Company, on March 11, 1930, filed an application in Case No. 4182 to he permitted to intervene. The court denied the application on April 26, 1930. Notice of appeal from this order was duly given, and the court, on application, entered an order “that the intervener have a stay of execution and judgment for such time as may be necessary to enable it to perfect its appeal, upon condition that it enter into an undertaking to stay the execution and judgment in the sum of $5000, conditioned as provided hy Section 6412, Wyo. C. S. 1920.” It would seem, judging from the amount of the bond that was fixed, that it was the intention of the court to permit a stay of execution of the main judgment in Case No. 4182. It is stated in 3 C. J: 1276 that as a rule a person not a party to the proceeding in which the judgment of the court below complained of was rendered cannot obtain a supersedeas to such judgment, and that rule was applied in Culpepper County v. Gorrell, 20 Gratt. 484, to a case in which the applicant for the supersedeas had been denied the right to intervene. A similar point was before the court in State v. Holmes, 59 Nebr. 503, 81 N. W. 512, but the court in that case denied the application for supersedeas apparently on the theory that the applicant’s petition to intervene did not state facts sufficient to entitle him to intervene. So we are not prepared to decide whether or not an applicant for intervention might not at times and under particular circumstances be entitled to a supersedeas to *222 stay execution of the main judgment, but we shall not do so at this time because the point has not been properly argued; and we need not do so, because the undertaking on appeal given by the Federal Gold Mining Company was clearly not given to stay execution of the main judgment, for it is therein provided: “The condition of this bond is such that if the appellant shall perfect its appeal within the time allowed by law and when perfected shall prosecute the same in the appellate court with diligence and shall abide the judgment appealed from and pay to the plaintiff the amount thereof with interest and costs, then this obligation shall be void,” etc. The “judgment appealed from” was the order denying the right to intervene, and has nothing in common with the main judgment rendered in Case No. 4182.

3. (a) We pass, accordingly, to the consideration of the refusal of the court to dismiss Case No. 4212 and the restraining order issued in that connection. That order was issued because of the pendency of Case No. 4212, and if, accordingly, that case was not in fact pending at that time, the order necessarily becomes void. We must proceed then to consider the legal effect of the motion to dismiss. Section 5879, Wyo. C. S. 1920, as far as applicable here, provides :

“An action may be dismissed without prejudice to a future action: 1. By the plaintiff before the final submission of the cause to the jury, or to the court, when the trial is by the court.”

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 897, 42 Wyo. 214, 71 A.L.R. 993, 1930 Wyo. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-tibbals-v-district-court-of-the-ninth-judicial-district-wyo-1930.