Stokes v. Van Seventer

355 P.2d 594, 1960 Alas. LEXIS 58
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1960
Docket15
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 355 P.2d 594 (Stokes v. Van Seventer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stokes v. Van Seventer, 355 P.2d 594, 1960 Alas. LEXIS 58 (Ala. 1960).

Opinion

AREND, Associate Justice.

The basic problem here is whether the courts of Alaska may by interlocutory order or provisional remedy require the defendants in an ejectment action to pay into the registry of the court, pending judgment, a reasonable monthly rental for their use of the property in litigation. We say, no. Before elaborating on our answer, however, we need to consider first a procedural question involved, and that is whether such an order is an appealable order. A brief summary of the facts of the case will simplify our treatment of the problems presented.

On October 10, 1958, the plaintiffs-ap-pellees started an action in ejectment in the District Court for the District (Territory) *595 of Alaska, Third Judicial Division against the defendants who are the appellants herein. The complaint contains the usual allegations of ownership, ouster and damage, followed by a prayer that the plaintiffs be restored to possession with damages for the withholding of such possession. In addition the plaintiffs set forth what they consider to be the reasonable rental value of the subject property and ask the court to require the defendants to pay such rent pen-dente lite.

In their answer the defendants deny plaintiffs’ allegations as to ownership, ouster, damages and rent. Then, by way of affirmative defense, defendants allege that the tax deed, upon which the title of the plaintiffs is predicated, was invalid because the property had been subjected to 1 a double assessment. They also claim that the tax sale was not held in the manner required by law.

Approximately four months after the commencement of the action, the plaintiffs filed their motion for the payment of rent by the defendants into the registry of the court. A formal order granting the motion was entered by the court on May 25, 1959. The defendants then moved to set aside the rent order, which was denied by order of the court on August 5, 1959. The defendants appealed from the orders so entered.

Under the rule making power vested in it by the State Constitution, 1 the Supreme Court of Alaska has declared that appeals may be taken to this court from a final judgment of the superior court or judge thereof in any action or proceeding, civil or criminal. 2 (Emphasis added.) This was also the rule at common law 3 and is followed in the Federal Courts. 4

The order to pay rent in the instant case was not a final order or judgment. Appellants themselves inform this court in their brief that they are appealing from “an interlocutory order or provisional remedy.” In the case of an interlocutory order some further steps are required to be taken to enable the court to adjudicate and settle the rights of the parties, while a final judgment determines the rights of the parties without further adjudication on the merits. 5 To permit the appellants to appeal from the interlocutory order under consideration here would be contrary to the general policy of this court to prohibit piecemeal disposal of litigation. 6

However, we do not propose to send the appellants hence without relief. As this court pointed out in the case of City of Fairbanks v. Schaible, 7 when we adopted the final judgment rule, we did not make it inflexible. Provision for review of interlocutory orders was made in our Rules 23' to 33 but on a very selective basis and in the exercise of sound judicial discretion. One of the factors which will be considered by this court in exercising this discretion is whether the sound policy behind the general rule of requiring appeals to be taken only from final judgments is outweighed by the claim of the individual case that justice demands a present and immediate review of a particular non-appealable order or decision. 8 Review will also be granted where the trial court has so far departed from the accepted and usual course of judicial proceedings as to call for this court’s power of supervision and review. 9 We *596 consider that both of these factors are present in the instant case and that appellants are entitled to an immediate review, and the same is hereby granted.

True, the appellants should have filed with us a petition for review instead of proceeding by the appeal route. Their mistake is understandable, inasmuch as the Supreme Court Rules were not adopted and put into effect until about one month before the appeal was taken. This did not allow very much time for counsel to become thoroughly familiar with the rules. Prior to the adoption of our rules, only final judgments of the District Courts of Alaska were reviewable in the appellate court. 10 Were we to dismiss the review proceeding here before us, the appellants would have to wait until a final judgment is entered in the court below before they may again attack the order to pay rent, because the time for filing a petition for review has long since expired. So, in the interests of justice and to prevent hardship this court upon its own motion will treat the appeal as a petition for review, as it may rightfully do under the rules. 11

Under Supreme Court Rule' 40(d) 12 the appellees could have moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the rent order was not an appealable order as required by Rule 6. Instead they chose to remain silent, thus causing the appellants to go to the effort and expense of having the record prepared and sent up to us, along with a brief in support of their position. In a one-page answering brief the appellees set forth the arguments that they would undoubtedly have used if this matter had been raised by a petition for review. First, they point out that the “appeal should more properly be a review under Rule 24,” and then argue that the appellants cannot prevail even under that rule because they cannot meet the considerations governing the granting of review as outlined in Rule 24. They conclude that it will be no hardship on the appellants to pay the rent money into the registry of the court, for, if the appellants ultimately prevail in this litigation, the money will be returned to them.’ With a substantial record and the briefs of both parties before us, we feel entitled to pass upon the merits of the controversy. 13

In the trial court the appellees as plaintiffs sought to support their motion for the order in question by a provision of Section 16-1-128, A.C.L.A.1949, 14

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Bluebook (online)
355 P.2d 594, 1960 Alas. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-van-seventer-alaska-1960.