Thayer v. Bellamy

71 P. 544, 9 Idaho 1, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 4
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 P. 544 (Thayer v. Bellamy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thayer v. Bellamy, 71 P. 544, 9 Idaho 1, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 4 (Idaho 1903).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

This action was commenced May 21, 1902, by plaintiffs filing their complaint, and on the same day .they filed; the...affidavit of William H; Walker; supporting all the material allegations of the complaint. The complaint, among [3]*3other things, alleges the citizenship of plaintiffs, ownership and right of possession of certain mining claims situated in the county of Custer, the wrongful and unlawful entry of defendants into and upon said mining claims through and by means of a tunnel run by defendants into the said mining claims of plaintiffs, and the wrongful and unlawful extracting and removing of ores therefrom. Thereafter, and on the fourth day of June, 1902* the district judge, upon said complaint and affidavit, and without notice to defendants, granted plaintiffs .a temporary injunction, restraining the commission of 'the alleged acts pending the action. In October, 1902, the defendants filed their verified answer and cross-complaint, denying parts of the complaint, and setting up new matters in defense of the action. Among other things, it is admitted by the answer and alleged in the cross-complaint that plaintiffs are the owners of, and entitled to the possession of, the mining property described in plaintiffs’ complaint, and that defendants have entered into and upon said claim by means of a tunnel; but they allege in defense thereof that said tunnel is following the dip of a vein, the apex of which is in and upon the mining claim and property of the defendants adjoining plaintiffs’ claims. On the thirteenth day of October, 1902, the defendants, in open court, moved the court, upon the complaint’ and affidavit of Walker, on which the injunction had been granted, and their verified answer and cross-complaint, for a dissolution of the restraining order previously granted. The plaintiffs, whose attorneys were present in court, resisted the motion, and offered in opposition thereto the affidavits of J. A. McFadden, Fred A. Stimson, and W. H. Walker. The court rejected these affidavits, and refused to consider them, to which action and ruling of the court plaintiffs excepted, and assign the same as error.

In view of the conclusions we have reached in this case, it will be unnecessary for us to examine into the merits- of the showing as made by the pleadings and affidavits filed and offered for the consideration of the trial judge upon the issuance of the injunction, and upon the motion to dissolve same. The vital [4]*4question here presented is the right of the plaintiffs to oppose by affidavits the motion of defendants to dissolve the injunction.

Section 4295 of the Bevised Statutes of 1887 provides: “If an injunction be granted without notice, the defendant, at any time before the trial, may apply to the judge who granted the injunction, or to the court in which the action is brought, to dissolve or modify the same. The application may be made upon the complaint and the affidavit on which the injunction was granted, or the answer or upon affidavit on the part of the defendant, with or without the answer. If the application be made upon affidavits on the part of the defendant, it must be upon reasonable notice to the plaintiff, and in that case, but not otherwise, the plaintiff may oppose the same by affidavits or other evidence, in addition to those on which the injunction was granted.” It is now contended by appellants that, where the defendants offered their verified answer and cross-complaint in opposition to the complaint and affidavit on which the injunction had been granted, plaintiffs at once, by virtue of said section 4295, became entitled, as matter of law, to notice, and the right to have all affidavits presented by them considered on such-hearing. Section 118 of the California Practice Act was the same as section 4295, above quoted, with the exception that the words “or the answer,” following the first clause of the second sentence of our section, do not appear in the California statute. Section 532 of the California Code of Civil Procedure is the same as section 118 of the Practice Act. The California supreme court, in case of Falkinburg v. Lucy, 35 Cal. 60, 95 Am. Dec. 76, in construing section 118 of the Practice Act, in a case similar to the one here under consideration, used the following language: “The plaintiff is entitled to an injunction at the time of issuing the summons upon the complaint alone, if it makes a proper case and is verified in the manner stated in the one hundred and thirteenth section; but, if he asks for an injunction at any time thereafter, he must do so upon affidavits. If the injunction has been granted without notice to the defendant, he may move to dissolve — 1. Upon the complaint and affidavits, or, in other words, the papers, whatever they [5]*5may have been, npon which the injunction was granted; or 2. Upon the papers upon which it was granted, and affidavits on the part of defendant, with or without the answer. If the defendant rests his motion upon the papers upon which the injunction was granted, the plaintiff can make no further showing, but must stand upon his complaint, or his complaint and affidavits, as the case may be. If, however, the defendant makes a counter-showing by affidavit, with or without the answer, the plaintiff may meet if with a further showing on his part. It will be observed that the defendant is not allowed to move upon the answer, with or without affidavits, but upon affidavits, with or without the answer; hence, if he moves upon!' what he has prepared as his verified answer, he makes it an affidavit, in the sense of the statute, for all the purposes of his motion, and he cannot deprive the plaintiff of his right to reply by calling it an ‘answer/ instead of an ‘affidavit/ ” This case has been cited with approval in Hiller v. Collins, 63 Cal. 235, and Hefflon v. Bowers, 72 Cal. 270, 13 Pac. 690. In the latter ease the court say: “So long as the defendant rests his right to have the order vacated or modified upon the same matters which were considered by the court in granting it, there can be no good reason for allowing the plaintiff to be heard; but when the defendant goes further, and offers evidence to overcome the plaintiff’s prima facie case and especially in cases like this, where he relies upon the fact that since the issuance of the injunction the principal thing complained of has been abated, it becomes necessary, by virtue of both the reason and the letter of the ride, that the plaintiff should be permitted to support with additional evidence the prima facie case, which is all he was required to make in the first instance.” Section 526 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California, which enumerates the cases in which an injunction may be granted, has no provision corresponding to subdivision 5 of section 4288 of our statute; and the same was true as to section 112 of the Practice Act, which provided the eases in which an injunction might issue. -It will be observed that in California an application to dissolve a temporary injunction may' be made: 1. Upon the complaint [6]*6and affidavit on which the injunction was granted; 2.. Upon affidavit on the part of defendant, with or without answer— while in this state the application may be made: 1. Upon the complaint and affidavit on which the injunction was granted; 2. On the answer; 3. Upon affidavit on the part of the defendant, with or without the answer.

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Bluebook (online)
71 P. 544, 9 Idaho 1, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thayer-v-bellamy-idaho-1903.